On an equivalence in discrete extremal problems (Q1301649)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
On an equivalence in discrete extremal problems
scientific article

    Statements

    On an equivalence in discrete extremal problems (English)
    0 references
    13 March 2000
    0 references
    Let \(G=(V,E)\) be a finite graph. It has the nested solutions (NS) property (for \(F:2^V\to R)\) if there exists a total order on \(V\) such that for any \(t\in\{1,2, \dots, |V|\}\) the collection of the first \(t\) elements in this order is an \(F\)-optimal subset, i.e., a subset \(A\) of \(V\) such that \(F(A)\) is maximal (minimal if we wish) among all \(|A|\)-subsets of \(V\). Having the NS-property is a common occurrence in the (obtained) solutions to several classes of extremal problems in graphs or posets (via Hasse diagrams mostly) and using this observation as a base of operations the author is able to obtain results on Cartesian-product graphs \(G=G_ 1\times G_2\) in terms of results for the \(G_i\), \(i=1,2\). Thus, not only are classes of problems seen to be closely related (here: the edge isoperimetric problem; the shadow minimization problem; the maximum weight ideals in posets problem) but using a rather clever equivalence the author has produced he is e.g. able to handle the EIP-problem for \(G=T_1\times\cdots\times T_n\), the Cartesian product of finite trees, showing that it can be viewed as equivalent (in his sense) to \(Q=C_1\times\cdots\times C_n\), where \(C_i\) is the chain of order \(|T_i|\), i.e., a linear extension of \(T_i\). The key to the unscramble is the connection to posets and the MWI and the observation that in the NS-ness of the (extreme problems on) graphs Macauleyness of posets comes into play in a definitive and interesting way leading to ``solutions'' to these problems in several relevant cases.
    0 references
    0 references
    extremal problems in graphs or posets
    0 references
    equivalence
    0 references
    chain
    0 references
    0 references