====== Thomas Zaslavsky (Binghamton) ====== ====== What I Remember from Baton Rouge ====== ===== Abstract for the Combinatorics Seminar 2007 April 1 and 8 ===== I attended the excellent matroid theory sessions and some of the structural graph theory talks. There are powerful developments abroad in matroid theory! I'll try to give the flavor.
A traditional theme in matroid theory, which only gains vitality with time, is excluded minors. Many talks concerned either excluding an interesting minor and looking at what's left, or finding excluded minors for an interesting property.
One that caught my attention was [[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-272.pdf|"Binary matroids with no M(K3,3) minor"]]. Dillon Mayhew reported on a 100-page proof that these matroids are
I (and Dan Slilaty) noticed that, since M = M*(G)+e0) is dual to the coextension M(G)×e0, M* is the complete lift matroid L0(Σ) of a signed graph. Furthermore, we can find this signed graph explicitly by projective-planar duality. Perhaps this will lead to a simpler proof?
Another broad theme at the session was "chain theorems", which state that a matroid M of some type contains a small set S of, say, 1, 2, or 3 points such that M/S is again of the same type, or else M belongs to an identifiable minimal set. [The classical examples are that a 3-connected graph contains e such that M/e or M\e is 3-connected, or it is a wheel, and that a 3-connected matroid contains e such that M/e or M\e is 3-connected, or it is a wheel or whirl matroid (Tutte). Indeed, one can specify a 3-connected minor N of M that is to be a minor of M/e or M\e (Seymour).]
[[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-128.pdf|"Inductions for '4-connected' graphs and matroids"]], delivered by Xiangqian Zhou, and [[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-112.pdf|"Chain-type and splitter-type theorems for cocircuits and hyperplanes in 3-connected matroids"]], by Rhiannon Hall, presented the philosophy and examples of such theorems. [[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-312.pdf|"On minor-minimally 3-connected binary matroids"]] by Loni Delaplane et al. also used a chain theorem.
There was also a chain talk in the graph theory session: [[Sang-il%20Oum|"Chain theorems for 4-prime graphs"]] by Sang-il Oum, which I couldn't attend.
I gave a long lecture, [[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-305.pdf|"Other matroids from graphs"]], mostly on some of the many aspects of the frame and lift matroids of signed, gain, and biased graphs, followed by our former student Dan Slilaty on [[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-375.pdf|"Signed-graphic matroids"]].
My talk was a very fast survey, omitting 2/3 to 3/4 of the subject. (I may give a short version in the seminar, later.)
Dan's talk was about when the frame matroid G(Σ) of a signed graph is binary (representable over GF(2)) or quaternary (over GF(4)). (This extends the unpublished work of my former student Steve Pagano that assumed 3-connectedness.)
There is an area of polyhedral-combinatorics optimization that studies "binary clutters". A binary clutter is the set //**C**//(M,σ) of negative circuits in a signed binary matroid (M,σ). If the matroid is graphic, it is the set of negative circles in a signed graph. The relevant matroid is the complete lift matroid, L0(M,σ). A main problem is whether the incidence matrix, as the coefficient matrix A of a linear programming problem constrained by A**x** ≥ **1**, **x** ≥ **0**, gives integral solutions. (This means a certain polyhedron has integral vertices. Please forgive errors; I don't know enough to state all this correctly.)
Xujin Chen talked about [[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-294.pdf|"An excluded minor characterization of box-Mengerian matroid ports"]]. In a matroid with distinguished element e0, a "port" is C\e0 where C is any circuit that contains e0. (M,σ) is box Mengerian if any linear program whose coefficient matrix is the incidence matrix A of //**C**//(M,σ) has an integral dual solution, given an integral objective function (this matrix is called a "TDI" matrix), even when constrained by arbitrary integral upper and lower bounds (that's called "box TDI"). This property depends on L0(M,σ)'s not having certain forbidden minors, thus on (M,σ)'s not having certain forbidden signed minors.
Guoli Ding, from L.S.U., also talked about box TDI and binary clutters, but his talk was called [[http://www.ams.org/amsmtgs/2146_abstracts/1037-05-212.pdf|"On Quasi-bipartite Graphs"]]. Take A = the unoriented incidence matrix of a graph G. (This is an oriented incidence matrix of −G, i.e., G with all negative edges.) G is "quasi-bipartite" if the polyhedron A**x** ≥ **1**, **x** ≥ **0** has integral solutions. Graph theoretically, G is quasi-bipartite iff deleting any odd circle leaves at least one isolated vertex.