Rankwidth meets stability
Abstract
We study two notions of being well-structured for classes of graphs that are inspired by classic model theory. A class of graphs is monadically stable if it is impossible to define arbitrarily long linear orders in vertex-colored graphs from using a fixed first-order formula. Similarly, monadic dependence corresponds to the impossibility of defining all graphs in this way. Examples of monadically stable graph classes are nowhere dense classes, which provide a robust theory of sparsity. Examples of monadically dependent classes are classes of bounded rankwidth (or equivalently, bounded cliquewidth), which can be seen as a dense analog of classes of bounded treewidth. Thus, monadic stability and monadic dependence extend classical structural notions for graphs by viewing them in a wider, model-theoretical context. We explore this emerging theory by proving the following: - A class of graphs is a first-order transduction of a class with bounded treewidth if and only if has bounded rankwidth and a stable edge relation (i.e. graphs from exclude some half-graph as a semi-induced subgraph). - If a class of graphs is monadically dependent and not monadically stable, then has in fact an unstable edge relation. As a consequence, we show that classes with bounded rankwidth excluding some half-graph as a semi-induced subgraph are linearly -bounded. Our proofs are effective and lead to polynomial time algorithms.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2007.07857,
title = {Rankwidth meets stability},
author = {Jaroslav Nesetril and Patrice Ossona de Mendez and Michal Pilipczuk and Roman Rabinovich and Sebastian Siebertz},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2007.07857},
year = {2020}
}