English

Polynomial treewidth forces a large grid-like-minor

Combinatorics 2012-05-21 v4

Abstract

Robertson and Seymour proved that every graph with sufficiently large treewidth contains a large grid minor. However, the best known bound on the treewidth that forces an ×\ell\times\ell grid minor is exponential in \ell. It is unknown whether polynomial treewidth suffices. We prove a result in this direction. A \emph{grid-like-minor of order} \ell in a graph GG is a set of paths in GG whose intersection graph is bipartite and contains a KK_{\ell}-minor. For example, the rows and columns of the ×\ell\times\ell grid are a grid-like-minor of order +1\ell+1. We prove that polynomial treewidth forces a large grid-like-minor. In particular, every graph with treewidth at least c4logc\ell^4\sqrt{\log\ell} has a grid-like-minor of order \ell. As an application of this result, we prove that the cartesian product GK2G\square K_2 contains a KK_{\ell}-minor whenever GG has treewidth at least c4logc\ell^4\sqrt{\log\ell}.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.0724,
  title  = {Polynomial treewidth forces a large grid-like-minor},
  author = {Bruce A. Reed and David R. Wood},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.0724},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

v2: The bound in the main result has been improved by using the Lovasz Local Lemma. v3: minor improvements, v4: final section rewritten

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:16:43.401Z