CODMJul 11, 2025

Extremal minimal bipartite matching covered graphs

arXiv:2404.064451 citationsh-index: 6
AI Analysis

For graph theorists studying matching theory, this provides a complete structural description of extremal cases for several bounds, though the results are incremental extensions of known theory.

The paper characterizes all extremal minimal bipartite matching covered graphs, proving that each such graph is obtained from two copies of a tree without degree-2 vertices by adding edges between corresponding leaves. It also characterizes four other extremal classes derived from bounds in Lovász and Plummer's work and discusses bounds for minimal k-extendable bipartite graphs.

A connected graph, on four or more vertices, is matching covered (aka 1-extendable) if every edge is present in some perfect matching. An ear decomposition theorem exists for bipartite matching covered graphs due to Hetyei. From the results and proofs of Lovász and Plummer, that rely on Hetyei's theorem, one may deduce that any minimal bipartite matching covered graph has at least $2(m-n+2)$ vertices of degree two (where minimal means that deleting any edge results in a graph that is not matching covered); such a graph is said to be extremal if it attains the stated lower bound. In this paper, we provide a complete characterization of the class of extremal minimal bipartite matching covered graphs. In particular, we prove that every such graph $G$ is obtained from two copies of a tree devoid of degree two vertices, say $T$ and $T'$, by adding edges -- each of which joins a leaf of $T$ with the corresponding leaf of $T'$. Apart from the aforementioned bound, there are four other bounds that appear in, or may be deduced from, the work of Lovász and Plummer. Each of these bounds leads to a notion of extremality. In this paper, we obtain a complete characterization of all of these extremal classes and also establish relationships between them. Two of our characterizations are in the same spirit as the one stated above. For the remaining two extremal classes, we reduce each of them to one of the already characterized extremal classes using standard matching theoretic operations. A connected graph is k-extendable if it has a matching of cardinality $k$ and each such matching extends to a perfect matching. We also discuss bounds proved by Lou (1999) for minimal k-extendable bipartite graphs. We conjecture stronger bounds and provide evidence for our conjectures by constructing tight examples that are straightforward generalizations of the ones that appear in the 1-extendable case.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes