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On tree-decompositions for infinite chordal graphs

Max Pitz, Lucas Real, Roman Schaut

Abstract

A graph is chordal if it contains no induced cycle of length four or more. While finite chordal graphs are precisely those admitting tree-decompositions into cliques, this fails for infinite graphs. We establish two results extending the known theory to the infinite setting. Our first result strengthens sufficient conditions of Halin, Kříž-Thomas, and Chudnovsky-Nguyen-Scott-Seymour: We show that every chordal graph without a strict comb of cliques admits a tree-decomposition into maximal cliques. Our second result characterises the chordal graphs admitting tree-decompositions into finite cliques: a connected graph admits such a decomposition if and only if it is chordal, admits a normal spanning tree, and does not contain $\mathcal{H}$ $\unicode{x2013}$ an infinite clique with two non-adjacent dominating vertices $\unicode{x2013}$ as an induced minor. Combined with the characterisation of graphs with normal spanning trees, this yields a description by three types of forbidden minors. Both proofs proceed via greedy constructions of length $ω$, with the key new ingredient for the second result being an Extension Lemma that uses a finiteness theorem of Halin on minimal separators to produce suitable finite clique extensions at each step.

On tree-decompositions for infinite chordal graphs

Abstract

A graph is chordal if it contains no induced cycle of length four or more. While finite chordal graphs are precisely those admitting tree-decompositions into cliques, this fails for infinite graphs. We establish two results extending the known theory to the infinite setting. Our first result strengthens sufficient conditions of Halin, Kříž-Thomas, and Chudnovsky-Nguyen-Scott-Seymour: We show that every chordal graph without a strict comb of cliques admits a tree-decomposition into maximal cliques. Our second result characterises the chordal graphs admitting tree-decompositions into finite cliques: a connected graph admits such a decomposition if and only if it is chordal, admits a normal spanning tree, and does not contain an infinite clique with two non-adjacent dominating vertices as an induced minor. Combined with the characterisation of graphs with normal spanning trees, this yields a description by three types of forbidden minors. Both proofs proceed via greedy constructions of length , with the key new ingredient for the second result being an Extension Lemma that uses a finiteness theorem of Halin on minimal separators to produce suitable finite clique extensions at each step.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 5 sections, 12 theorems, 1 equation, 1 figure.

Key Result

Theorem 1.1

Every chordal graph without infinite clique has a tree-decomposition into maximal cliques.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: The graph $\mathop{\mathrm{\mathcal{H}}}\nolimits$, where the rectangle in the picture represents an infinite clique on which the two distinguished and non-adjacent vertices have their (common) neighbourhood.

Theorems & Definitions (23)

  • Theorem 1.1: Halin 1984
  • Theorem 1.2
  • Theorem 1.3
  • Lemma 2.1
  • proof
  • Corollary 2.2
  • proof
  • proof : Proof of \ref{['thm_main_chordal']}
  • Theorem 3.1
  • Lemma 3.2
  • ...and 13 more