equivalence between the minor and topological minor of or
Remark that if a graph G contains or as a topological minor (http://planetmath.org/subdivision) it is easy to see that it also contains respectively or as a minor.
Same goes for as minor. If graph G contains a minor of as minor it also contains a topological minor (http://planetmath.org/subdivision) of in G. So it’s suffices to show that if graph G contains a as minor, it also contains a or as topological minor (http://planetmath.org/subdivision).
Suppose that , let be minimal such that is a minor of . Because is minimal every branch set of induces a tree in and every two branch sets have exactly one edge between them. For every branch tree we can add all four edges joining it to the other branches, this way we obtain a tree . If each of the trees is a topological minor (http://planetmath.org/subdivision) of , will be a topological minor (http://planetmath.org/subdivision) of . This image should make clear how our looks like. The big circles are presenting different sets of vertices.
If one of the trees is not a it has exactly two vertices of degree 3, which means that is a topological minor (http://planetmath.org/subdivision) of . now looks like this. The big circles and triangles are presenting different sets of vertices.
Thus if then contains a topological minor (http://planetmath.org/subdivision) of or . Which proofs this theorem.
Title | equivalence between the minor and topological minor of or |
---|---|
Canonical name | EquivalenceBetweenTheMinorAndTopologicalMinorOfK5OrK33 |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 17:47:15 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 17:47:15 |
Owner | jwaixs (18148) |
Last modified by | jwaixs (18148) |
Numerical id | 11 |
Author | jwaixs (18148) |
Entry type | Proof |
Classification | msc 05C83 |
Classification | msc 05C10 |