CODMMay 11

A coarse Menger's Theorem for planar and bounded genus graphs

arXiv:2605.1111292.1
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Provides a coarse version of Menger's theorem for planar and bounded genus graphs, partially resolving a question about the limits of such coarse results in general graphs.

The authors prove a coarse Menger-type theorem for planar and bounded genus graphs: if no k pairwise vertex-disjoint S-T paths exist with pairwise distance > d, then there is a small set X (size bounded by f(d,k)) such that every S-T path is within distance d of X. This answers a question of Nguyen, Scott, and Seymour, who showed such a result fails for general graphs.

Menger's Theorem is a fundamental result in graph theory. It states that if in a graph $G$ with distinguished sets of terminal vertices $S$ and $T$ there are no $k$ pairwise vertex-disjoint $S$-$T$ paths, then there is a set of less than $k$ vertices that intersects every $S$-$T$ path. In this work, we give a coarse variant of this result for planar and bounded genus graphs. Precisely, we prove that for every surface $Σ$ there is a function $f\colon \mathbb{N}\times \mathbb{N}\to \mathbb{N}$ such that for every pair of integers $d,k\in \mathbb{N}$ and a $Σ$-embeddable graph $G$ with distinguished sets of terminal vertices $S$ and $T$, if $G$ does not contain a family of $k$ $S$-$T$ paths that are pairwise at distance larger than $d$, then there is a set $X$ consisting of at most $f(d,k)$ vertices of $G$ such that every $S$-$T$ path is at distance at most $d$ from a vertex of $X$. This partially answers questions of Nguyen, Scott, and Seymour [arXiv:2508.14332], who proved that such a result cannot hold in general graphs. A key ingredient of our proof is a structure theorem from the developing ''colorful'' graph minor theory, where the focus is on studying the structure in a graph relative to some fixed subsets of annotated vertices. In our case, these annotated vertices are $S$ and $T$.

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