Excluding a ladder
Abstract
A ladder is a grid graph. When does a graph class exclude some ladder as a minor? We show that this is the case if and only if all graphs in admit a proper vertex coloring with a bounded number of colors such that for every -connected subgraph of , there is a color that appears exactly once in . This type of vertex coloring is a relaxation of the notion of centered coloring, where for every connected subgraph of , there must be a color that appears exactly once in . The minimum number of colors in a centered coloring of is the treedepth of , and it is known that classes of graphs with bounded treedepth are exactly those that exclude a fixed path as a subgraph, or equivalently, as a minor. In this sense, the structure of graphs excluding a fixed ladder as a minor resembles the structure of graphs without long paths. Another similarity is as follows: It is an easy observation that every connected graph with two vertex-disjoint paths of length has a path of length . We show that every -connected graph which contains as a minor a union of sufficiently many vertex-disjoint copies of a grid has a grid minor. Our structural results have applications to poset dimension. We show that posets whose cover graphs exclude a fixed ladder as a minor have bounded dimension. This is a new step towards the goal of understanding which graphs are unavoidable as minors in cover graphs of posets with large dimension.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2002.00496,
title = {Excluding a ladder},
author = {Tony Huynh and Gwenaël Joret and Piotr Micek and Michał T. Seweryn and Paul Wollan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2002.00496},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
v3: revised according to referees' comments