English

Minimum degree condition forcing complete graph immersion

Combinatorics 2011-01-14 v1

Abstract

An immersion of a graph HH into a graph GG is a one-to-one mapping f:V(H)V(G)f:V(H) \to V(G) and a collection of edge-disjoint paths in GG, one for each edge of HH, such that the path PuvP_{uv} corresponding to edge uvuv has endpoints f(u)f(u) and f(v)f(v). The immersion is strong if the paths PuvP_{uv} are internally disjoint from f(V(H))f(V(H)). It is proved that for every positive integer tt, every simple graph of minimum degree at least 200t200t contains a strong immersion of the complete graph KtK_t. For dense graphs one can say even more. If the graph has order nn and has 2cn22cn^2 edges, then there is a strong immersion of the complete graph on at least c2nc^2 n vertices in GG in which each path PuvP_{uv} is of length 2. As an application of these results, we resolve a problem raised by Paul Seymour by proving that the line graph of every simple graph with average degree dd has a clique minor of order at least cd3/2cd^{3/2}, where c>0c>0 is an absolute constant. For small values of tt, 1t71\le t\le 7, every simple graph of minimum degree at least t1t-1 contains an immersion of KtK_t (Lescure and Meyniel, DeVos et al.). We provide a general class of examples showing that this does not hold when tt is large.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1101.2630,
  title  = {Minimum degree condition forcing complete graph immersion},
  author = {Matt DeVos and Zdeněk Dvořák and Jacob Fox and Jessica McDonald and Bojan Mohar and Diego Scheide},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1101.2630},
  year   = {2011}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T17:11:37.395Z