Partition matroid

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Template:Use American English Template:Short description In mathematics, a partition matroid or partitional matroid is a matroid that is a direct sum of uniform matroids.[1] It is defined over a base set in which the elements are partitioned into different categories. For each category, there is a capacity constraint - a maximum number of allowed elements from this category. The independent sets of a partition matroid are exactly the sets in which, for each category, the number of elements from this category is at most the category capacity.

Formal definition

Let Ci be a collection of disjoint sets ("categories"). Let di be integers with 0di|Ci| ("capacities"). Define a subset IiCi to be "independent" when, for every index i, |ICi|di. The sets satisfying this condition form the independent sets of a matroid, called a partition matroid.

The sets Ci are called the categories or the blocks of the partition matroid.

A basis of the partition matroid is a set whose intersection with every block Ci has size exactly di. A circuit of the matroid is a subset of a single block Ci with size exactly di+1. The rank of the matroid is di.[2]

Every uniform matroid Unr is a partition matroid, with a single block C1 of n elements and with d1=r. Every partition matroid is the direct sum of a collection of uniform matroids, one for each of its blocks.

In some publications, the notion of a partition matroid is defined more restrictively, with every di=1. The partitions that obey this more restrictive definition are the transversal matroids of the family of disjoint sets given by their blocks.[3]

Properties

As with the uniform matroids they are formed from, the dual matroid of a partition matroid is also a partition matroid, and every minor of a partition matroid is also a partition matroid. Direct sums of partition matroids are partition matroids as well.

Matching

A maximum matching in a graph is a set of edges that is as large as possible subject to the condition that no two edges share an endpoint. In a bipartite graph with bipartition (U,V), the sets of edges satisfying the condition that no two edges share an endpoint in U are the independent sets of a partition matroid with one block per vertex in U and with each of the numbers di equal to one. The sets of edges satisfying the condition that no two edges share an endpoint in V are the independent sets of a second partition matroid. Therefore, the bipartite maximum matching problem can be represented as a matroid intersection of these two matroids.[4]

More generally the matchings of a graph may be represented as an intersection of two matroids if and only if every odd cycle in the graph is a triangle containing two or more degree-two vertices.[5]

Clique complexes

A clique complex is a family of sets of vertices of a graph G that induce complete subgraphs of G. A clique complex forms a matroid if and only if G is a complete multipartite graph, and in this case the resulting matroid is a partition matroid. The clique complexes are exactly the set systems that can be formed as intersections of families of partition matroids for which every Template:Nowrap

Enumeration

The number of distinct partition matroids that can be defined over a set of n labeled elements, for n=0,1,2,, is

1, 2, 5, 16, 62, 276, 1377, 7596, 45789, 298626, 2090910, ... Template:OEIS.

The exponential generating function of this sequence is f(x)=exp(ex(x1)+2x+1).[6]

References

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  3. E.g., see Template:Harvtxt. Template:Harvtxt uses the broader definition but notes that the di=1 restriction is useful in many applications.
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