English

Matroid Pathwidth and Code Trellis Complexity

Discrete Mathematics 2007-07-13 v1 Information Theory math.IT

Abstract

We relate the notion of matroid pathwidth to the minimum trellis state-complexity (which we term trellis-width) of a linear code, and to the pathwidth of a graph. By reducing from the problem of computing the pathwidth of a graph, we show that the problem of determining the pathwidth of a representable matroid is NP-hard. Consequently, the problem of computing the trellis-width of a linear code is also NP-hard. For a finite field \F\F, we also consider the class of \F\F-representable matroids of pathwidth at most ww, and correspondingly, the family of linear codes over \F\F with trellis-width at most ww. These are easily seen to be minor-closed. Since these matroids (and codes) have branchwidth at most ww, a result of Geelen and Whittle shows that such matroids (and the corresponding codes) are characterized by finitely many excluded minors. We provide the complete list of excluded minors for w=1w=1, and give a partial list for w=2w=2.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0705.1384,
  title  = {Matroid Pathwidth and Code Trellis Complexity},
  author = {Navin Kashyap},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0705.1384},
  year   = {2007}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T08:26:50.122Z