English

Pathwidth vs cocircumference

Combinatorics 2024-03-05 v2 Discrete Mathematics

Abstract

The {\em circumference} of a graph GG with at least one cycle is the length of a longest cycle in GG. A classic result of Birmel\'e (2003) states that the treewidth of GG is at most its circumference minus 11. In case GG is 22-connected, this upper bound also holds for the pathwidth of GG; in fact, even the treedepth of GG is upper bounded by its circumference (Bria\'nski, Joret, Majewski, Micek, Seweryn, Sharma; 2023). In this paper, we study whether similar bounds hold when replacing the circumference of GG by its {\em cocircumference}, defined as the largest size of a {\em bond} in GG, an inclusion-wise minimal set of edges FF such that GFG-F has more components than GG. In matroidal terms, the cocircumference of GG is the circumference of the bond matroid of GG. Our first result is the following `dual' version of Birmel\'e's theorem: The treewidth of a graph GG is at most its cocircumference. Our second and main result is an upper bound of 3k23k-2 on the pathwidth of a 22-connected graph GG with cocircumference kk. Contrary to circumference, no such bound holds for the treedepth of GG. Our two upper bounds are best possible up to a constant factor.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2306.03621,
  title  = {Pathwidth vs cocircumference},
  author = {Marcin Briański and Gwenaël Joret and Michał T. Seweryn},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2306.03621},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

v2: revised following the referees' comments