Binary matroid

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Template:Short description In matroid theory, a binary matroid is a matroid that can be represented over the finite field GF(2).[1] That is, up to isomorphism, they are the matroids whose elements are the columns of a (0,1)-matrix and whose sets of elements are independent if and only if the corresponding columns are linearly independent in GF(2).

Alternative characterizations

A matroid M is binary if and only if

  • It is the matroid defined from a symmetric (0,1)-matrix.[2]
  • For every set 𝒮 of circuits of the matroid, the symmetric difference of the circuits in 𝒮 can be represented as a disjoint union of circuits.[3][4]
  • For every pair of circuits of the matroid, their symmetric difference contains another circuit.[4]
  • For every pair C,D where C is a circuit of M and D is a circuit of the dual matroid of M, |CD| is an even number.[4][5]
  • For every pair B,C where B is a basis of M and C is a circuit of M, C is the symmetric difference of the fundamental circuits induced in B by the elements of CB.[4][5]
  • No matroid minor of M is the uniform matroid U42, the four-point line.[6][7][8]
  • In the geometric lattice associated to the matroid, every interval of height two has at most five elements.[8]

Every regular matroid, and every graphic matroid, is binary.[5] A binary matroid is regular if and only if it does not contain the Fano plane (a seven-element non-regular binary matroid) or its dual as a minor.[9] A binary matroid is graphic if and only if its minors do not include the dual of the graphic matroid of K5 nor of K3,3.[10] If every circuit of a binary matroid has odd cardinality, then its circuits must all be disjoint from each other; in this case, it may be represented as the graphic matroid of a cactus graph.[5]

Additional properties

If M is a binary matroid, then so is its dual, and so is every minor of M.[5] Additionally, the direct sum of binary matroids is binary.

Template:Harvtxt define a bipartite matroid to be a matroid in which every circuit has even cardinality, and an Eulerian matroid to be a matroid in which the elements can be partitioned into disjoint circuits. Within the class of graphic matroids, these two properties describe the matroids of bipartite graphs and Eulerian graphs (not-necessarily-connected graphs in which all vertices have even degree), respectively. For planar graphs (and therefore also for the graphic matroids of planar graphs) these two properties are dual: a planar graph or its matroid is bipartite if and only if its dual is Eulerian. The same is true for binary matroids. However, there exist non-binary matroids for which this duality breaks down.[5][11]

Any algorithm that tests whether a given matroid is binary, given access to the matroid via an independence oracle, must perform an exponential number of oracle queries, and therefore cannot take polynomial time.[12]

References

Template:Reflist

  1. Template:Citation.
  2. Template:Citation.
  3. Template:Citation.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Template:Harvtxt, Theorem 10.1.3, p. 162.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Template:Citation.
  6. Template:Citation.
  7. Template:Citation.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Template:Harvtxt, Section 10.2, "An excluded minor criterion for a matroid to be binary", pp. 167–169.
  9. Template:Harvtxt, Theorem 10.4.1, p. 175.
  10. Template:Harvtxt, Theorem 10.5.1, p. 176.
  11. Template:Citation/
  12. Template:Citation.