English

Extremal Hypergraphs for Ryser's Conjecture: Home-Base Hypergraphs

Combinatorics 2016-06-21 v3

Abstract

Ryser's Conjecture states that any rr-partite rr-uniform hypergraph has a vertex cover of size at most r1r - 1 times the size of the largest matching. For r=2r = 2, the conjecture is simply K\"onig's Theorem and every bipartite graph is a witness for its tightness. The conjecture has also been proven for r=3r = 3 by Aharoni using topological methods, but the proof does not give information on the extremal 33-uniform hypergraphs. Our goal in this paper is to characterize those hypergraphs which are tight for Aharoni's Theorem. Our proof of this characterization is also based on topological machinery, particularly utilizing results on the (topological) connectedness of the independence complex of the line graph of the link graphs of 33-uniform Ryser-extremal hypergraphs, developed in a separate paper. The current paper contains the second, structural hypergraph-theoretic part of the argument, where we use the information on the line graph of the link graphs to nail down the elements of a structure we call \emph{home-base hypergraph}. While there is a single minimal home-base hypergraph with matching number kk for every positive integer kNk \in \mathbb{N}, home-base hypergraphs with matching number kk are far from being unique. There are infinitely many of them and each of them is composed of kk copies of two different kinds of basic structures, whose hyperedges can intersect in various restricted, but intricate ways. Our characterization also proves an old and wide open strengthening of Ryser's Conjecture, due to Lov\'asz, for the 33-uniform extremal case, that is, for hypergraphs with τ=2ν\tau = 2 \nu.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1401.0171,
  title  = {Extremal Hypergraphs for Ryser's Conjecture: Home-Base Hypergraphs},
  author = {Penny Haxell and Lothar Narins and Tibor Szabó},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1401.0171},
  year   = {2016}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T02:37:37.950Z