Bisimplicial separators
Abstract
A minimal separator of a graph is a set such that there exist vertices with the property that separates from in , but no proper subset of does. For an integer , we say that a minimal separator is -simplicial if it can be covered by cliques and denote by the class of all graphs in which each minimal separator is -simplicial. We show that for each , the class is closed under induced minors, and we use this to show that the Maximum Weight Stable Set problem can be solved in polynomial time for . We also give a complete list of minimal forbidden induced minors for . Next, we show that, for , every nonnull graph in has a -simplicial vertex, i.e., a vertex whose neighborhood is a union of cliques; we deduce that the Maximum Weight Clique problem can be solved in polynomial time for graphs in . Further, we show that, for , it is NP-hard to recognize graphs in ; the time complexity of recognizing graphs in is unknown. We also show that the Maximum Clique problem is NP-hard for graphs in . Finally, we prove a decomposition theorem for diamond-free graphs in (where the diamond is the graph obtained from by deleting one edge), and we use this theorem to obtain polynomial-time algorithms for the Vertex Coloring and recognition problems for diamond-free graphs in , and improved running times for the Maximum Weight Clique and Maximum Weight Stable Set problems for this class of graphs.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2312.10830,
title = {Bisimplicial separators},
author = {Martin Milanič and Irena Penev and Nevena Pivač and Kristina Vušković},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2312.10830},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
24 pages