English

Injective split systems

Combinatorics 2022-11-09 v1

Abstract

A split system S\mathcal S on a finite set XX, X3|X|\ge3, is a set of bipartitions or splits of XX which contains all splits of the form {x,X{x}}\{x,X-\{x\}\}, xXx \in X. To any such split system S\mathcal S we can associate the Buneman graph B(S)\mathcal B(\mathcal S) which is essentially a median graph with leaf-set XX that displays the splits in S\mathcal S. In this paper, we consider properties of injective split systems, that is, split systems S\mathcal S with the property that medB(S)(Y)medB(S)(Y)\mathrm{med}_{\mathcal B(\mathcal S)}(Y) \neq \mathrm{med}_{\mathrm B(\mathcal S)}(Y') for any 3-subsets Y,YY,Y' in XX, where medB(S)(Y)\mathrm {med}_{\mathcal B(\mathcal S)}(Y) denotes the median in B(S)\mathcal B(\mathcal S) of the three elements in YY considered as leaves in B(S)\mathcal B(\mathcal S). In particular, we show that for any set XX there always exists an injective split system on XX, and we also give a characterization for when a split system is injective. We also consider how complex the Buneman graph B(S)\mathcal B(\mathcal S) needs to become in order for a split system S\mathcal S on XX to be injective. We do this by introducing a quantity for X|X| which we call the injective dimension for X|X|, as well as two related quantities, called the injective 2-split and the rooted-injective dimension. We derive some upper and lower bounds for all three of these dimensions and also prove that some of these bounds are tight. An underlying motivation for studying injective split systems is that they can be used to obtain a natural generalization of symbolic tree maps. An important consequence of our results is that any three-way symbolic map on XX can be represented using Buneman graphs.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2211.04322,
  title  = {Injective split systems},
  author = {M. Hellmuth and K. T. Huber and V. Moulton and G. E. Scholz and P. F. Stadler},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2211.04322},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

22 pages, 3 figures