English

On representable graphs, semi-transitive orientations, and the representation numbers

Combinatorics 2008-10-03 v1

Abstract

A graph G=(V,E)G=(V,E) is representable if there exists a word WW over the alphabet VV such that letters xx and yy alternate in WW if and only if (x,y)E(x,y)\in E for each xyx\neq y. If WW is kk-uniform (each letter of WW occurs exactly kk times in it) then GG is called kk-representable. It was shown that a graph is representable if and only if it is kk-representable for some kk. Minimum kk for which a representable graph GG is kk-representable is called its representation number. In this paper we give a characterization of representable graphs in terms of orientations. Namely, we show that a graph is representable if and only if it admits an orientation into a so-called \emph{semi-transitive digraph}. This allows us to prove a number of results about representable graphs, not the least that 3-colorable graphs are representable. We also prove that the representation number of a graph on nn nodes is at most nn, from which one concludes that the recognition problem for representable graphs is in NP. This bound is tight up to a constant factor, as we present a graph whose representation number is n/2n/2. We also answer several questions, in particular, on representability of the Petersen graph and local permutation representability.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0810.0310,
  title  = {On representable graphs, semi-transitive orientations, and the representation numbers},
  author = {Magnus Mar Halldorsson and Sergey Kitaev and Artem Pyatkin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0810.0310},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

12 pages, 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:26:29.210Z