Biased Graph
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{{Short description, Graph with a list of distinguished cycles In mathematics, a biased graph is a
graph Graph may refer to: Mathematics *Graph (discrete mathematics), a structure made of vertices and edges **Graph theory, the study of such graphs and their properties *Graph (topology), a topological space resembling a graph in the sense of discre ...
with a list of distinguished circles (edge sets of simple cycles), such that if two circles in the list are contained in a theta graph, then the third circle of the theta graph is also in the list. A biased graph is a generalization of the combinatorial essentials of a
gain graph A gain graph is a graph whose edges are labelled "invertibly", or "orientably", by elements of a group ''G''. This means that, if an edge ''e'' in one direction has label ''g'' (a group element), then in the other direction it has label ''g''  ...
and in particular of a
signed graph In the area of graph theory in mathematics, a signed graph is a graph in which each edge has a positive or negative sign. A signed graph is balanced if the product of edge signs around every cycle is positive. The name "signed graph" and the no ...
. Formally, a biased graph Ω is a pair (''G'', ''B'') where ''B'' is a linear class of circles; this by definition is a class of circles that satisfies the theta-graph property mentioned above. A subgraph or edge set whose circles are all in ''B'' (and which contains no half-edges) is called balanced. For instance, a circle belonging to ''B'' is ''balanced'' and one that does not belong to ''B'' is ''unbalanced''. Biased graphs are interesting mostly because of their
matroid In combinatorics, a branch of mathematics, a matroid is a structure that abstracts and generalizes the notion of linear independence in vector spaces. There are many equivalent ways to define a matroid axiomatically, the most significant being ...
s, but also because of their connection with multiary
quasigroups In mathematics, especially in abstract algebra, a quasigroup is an algebraic structure resembling a group in the sense that " division" is always possible. Quasigroups differ from groups mainly in that they need not be associative and need not have ...
. See below.


Technical notes

A biased graph may have half-edges (one endpoint) and loose edges (no endpoints). The edges with two endpoints are of two kinds: a link has two distinct endpoints, while a loop has two coinciding endpoints. Linear classes of circles are a special case of linear subclasses of circuits in a
matroid In combinatorics, a branch of mathematics, a matroid is a structure that abstracts and generalizes the notion of linear independence in vector spaces. There are many equivalent ways to define a matroid axiomatically, the most significant being ...
.


Examples

* If every circle belongs to ''B'', and there are no half-edges, Ω is balanced. A balanced biased graph is (for most purposes) essentially the same as an ordinary graph. * If ''B'' is empty, Ω is called contrabalanced. Contrabalanced biased graphs are related to
bicircular matroid In the mathematical subject of matroid theory, the bicircular matroid of a graph ''G'' is the matroid ''B''(''G'') whose points are the edges of ''G'' and whose independent sets are the edge sets of pseudoforests of ''G'', that is, the edge sets in ...
s. * If ''B'' consists of the circles of even length, Ω is called antibalanced and is the biased graph obtained from an all-negative
signed graph In the area of graph theory in mathematics, a signed graph is a graph in which each edge has a positive or negative sign. A signed graph is balanced if the product of edge signs around every cycle is positive. The name "signed graph" and the no ...
. * The linear class ''B'' is additive, that is, closed under repeated
symmetric difference In mathematics, the symmetric difference of two sets, also known as the disjunctive union, is the set of elements which are in either of the sets, but not in their intersection. For example, the symmetric difference of the sets \ and \ is \. Th ...
(when the result is a circle),
if and only if In logic and related fields such as mathematics and philosophy, "if and only if" (shortened as "iff") is a biconditional logical connective between statements, where either both statements are true or both are false. The connective is b ...
''B'' is the class of positive circles of a signed graph. * Ω may have underlying graph that is a cycle of length ''n'' ≥ 3 with all edges doubled. Call this a biased 2''Cn'' . Such biased graphs in which no
digon In geometry, a digon is a polygon with two sides (edges) and two vertices. Its construction is degenerate in a Euclidean plane because either the two sides would coincide or one or both would have to be curved; however, it can be easily visu ...
(circle of length 2) is balanced lead to spikes and swirls (see Matroids, below). * Some kinds of biased graph are obtained from
gain graph A gain graph is a graph whose edges are labelled "invertibly", or "orientably", by elements of a group ''G''. This means that, if an edge ''e'' in one direction has label ''g'' (a group element), then in the other direction it has label ''g''  ...
s or are generalizations of special kinds of gain graph. The latter include biased expansion graphs, which generalize group expansion graphs.


Minors

A minor of a biased graph Ω = (''G'', ''B'') is the result of any sequence of taking subgraphs and contracting edge sets. For biased graphs, as for graphs, it suffices to take a subgraph (which may be the whole graph) and then contract an edge set (which may be the empty set). A subgraph of Ω consists of a subgraph ''H'' of the underlying graph ''G'', with balanced circle class consisting of those balanced circles that are in ''H''. The deletion of an edge set ''S'', written Ω − ''S'', is the subgraph with all vertices and all edges except those of ''S''. Contraction of Ω is relatively complicated. To contract one edge ''e'', the procedure depends on the kind of edge ''e'' is. If ''e'' is a link, contract it in ''G''. A circle ''C'' in the contraction ''G''/''e'' is balanced if either ''C'' or C \cup e is a balanced circle of ''G''. If ''e'' is a balanced loop or a loose edge, it is simply deleted. If it is an unbalanced loop or a half-edge, it and its vertex ''v'' are deleted; each other edge with ''v'' as an endpoint loses that endpoint, so a link with ''v'' as one endpoint becomes a half-edge at its other endpoint, while a loop or half-edge at ''v'' becomes a loose edge. In the contraction Ω/''S'' by an arbitrary edge set ''S'', the edge set is ''E'' − ''S''. (We let ''G'' = (''V'', ''E'').) The vertex set is the class of vertex sets of balanced components of the subgraph (''V'', ''S'') of Ω. That is, if (''V'', ''S'') has balanced components with vertex sets ''V''1, ..., ''V''''k'', then Ω/''S'' has ''k'' vertices ''V''1, ..., ''V''''k'' . An edge ''e'' of Ω, not in ''S'', becomes an edge of Ω/''S'' and each endpoint ''v''''i'' of ''e'' in Ω that belongs to some ''Vi'' becomes the endpoint ''Vi'' of ''e'' in Ω/''S'' ; thus, an endpoint of ''e'' that is not in a balanced component of (''V'', ''S'') disappears. An edge with all endpoints in unbalanced components of (''V'', ''S'') becomes a loose edge in the contraction. An edge with only one endpoint in a balanced component of (''V'', ''S'') becomes a half-edge. An edge with two endpoints that belong to different balanced components becomes a link, and an edge with two endpoints that belong to the same balanced component becomes a loop.


Matroids

There are two kinds of
matroid In combinatorics, a branch of mathematics, a matroid is a structure that abstracts and generalizes the notion of linear independence in vector spaces. There are many equivalent ways to define a matroid axiomatically, the most significant being ...
associated with a biased graph, both of which generalize the cycle matroid of a graph (Zaslavsky, 1991).


The frame matroid

The frame matroid (sometimes called bias matroid) of a biased graph, ''M''(Ω), (Zaslavsky, 1989) has for its ground set the edge set ''E''. An edge set is independent if each component contains either no circles or just one circle, which is unbalanced. (In matroid theory a half-edge acts like an unbalanced loop and a loose edge acts like a balanced loop.) ''M''(Ω) is a frame matroid in the abstract sense, meaning that it is a submatroid of a matroid in which, for at least one basis, the set of lines generated by pairs of basis elements covers the whole matroid. Conversely, every abstract frame matroid is the frame matroid of some biased graph. The circuits of the matroid are called frame circuits or bias circuits. There are four kinds. One is a balanced circle. Two other kinds are a pair of unbalanced circles together with a connecting simple path, such that the two circles are either disjoint (then the connecting path has one end in common with each circle and is otherwise disjoint from both) or share just a single common vertex (in this case the connecting path is that single vertex). The fourth kind of circuit is a theta graph in which every circle is unbalanced. The rank of an edge set ''S'' is ''n'' − ''b'', where ''n'' is the number of vertices of ''G'' and ''b'' is the number of balanced components of ''S'', counting isolated vertices as balanced components. Minors of the frame matroid agree with minors of the biased graph; that is, ''M''(Ω−''S'') = ''M''(Ω)−''S'' and ''M''(Ω/''S'') = ''M''(Ω)/''S''. Frame matroids generalize the Dowling geometries associated with a group (Dowling, 1973). The frame matroid of a biased 2''C''''n'' (see Examples, above) which has no balanced digons is called a swirl. It is important in matroid structure theory.


The lift matroid

The extended lift matroid ''L''0(Ω) has for its ground set the set ''E''0, which is the union of ''E'' with an extra point ''e''0. The lift matroid ''L''(Ω) is the extended lift matroid restricted to ''E''. The extra point acts exactly like an unbalanced loop or a half-edge, so we describe only the lift matroid. An edge set is independent if it contains either no circles or just one circle, which is unbalanced. A circuit is a balanced circle, a pair of unbalanced circles that are either disjoint or have just a common vertex, or a theta graph whose circles are all unbalanced. The rank of an edge set ''S'' is ''n'' − ''c'' + ε, where ''c'' is the number of components of ''S'', counting isolated vertices, and ε is 0 if ''S'' is balanced and 1 if it is not. Minors of the lift and extended lift matroids agree in part with minors of the biased graph. Deletions agree: ''L''(Ω−''S'') = ''L''(Ω)−''S''. Contractions agree only for balanced edge sets: ''M''(Ω/''S'') = ''M''(Ω)/''S'' if ''S'' is balanced, but not if it is unbalanced. If ''S'' is unbalanced, ''M''(Ω/''S'') = ''M''(''G'')/''S'' = ''M''(''G''/''S'') where ''M'' of a graph denotes the ordinary
graphic matroid In the mathematical theory of matroids, a graphic matroid (also called a cycle matroid or polygon matroid) is a matroid whose independent sets are the forests in a given finite undirected graph. The dual matroids of graphic matroids are called ...
. The lift matroid of a 2''C''''n'' (see Examples, above) which has no balanced digons is called a spike. Spikes are quite important in matroid structure theory.


Multiary quasigroups

Just as a group expansion of a complete graph ''K''''n'' encodes the group (see
Dowling geometry In combinatorial mathematics, a Dowling geometry, named after Thomas A. Dowling, is a matroid associated with a group. There is a Dowling geometry of each rank for each group. If the rank is at least 3, the Dowling geometry uniquely determines the ...
), its combinatorial analog expanding a simple cycle of length ''n'' + 1 encodes an ''n''-ary (multiary)
quasigroup In mathematics, especially in abstract algebra, a quasigroup is an algebraic structure resembling a group in the sense that " division" is always possible. Quasigroups differ from groups mainly in that they need not be associative and need not have ...
. It is possible to prove theorems about multiary quasigroups by means of biased graphs (Zaslavsky, t.a.)


References

*T. A. Dowling (1973), A class of geometric lattices based on finite groups. ''Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B'', Vol. 14, pp. 61–86. *Thomas Zaslavsky (1989), Biased graphs. I. Bias, balance, and gains. ''Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B'', Vol. 47, pp. 32–52. *Thomas Zaslavsky (1991), Biased graphs. II. The three matroids. ''Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B'', Vol. 51, pp. 46–72. *Thomas Zaslavsky (1999). A mathematical bibliography of signed and gain graphs and allied areas. 1999 edition
''Electronic Journal of Combinatorics'', Dynamic Surveys in Combinatorics, #DS8, archived
Current edition:
''Electronic Journal of Combinatorics'', Dynamic Surveys in Combinatorics, #DS8
*Thomas Zaslavsky (2012), Associativity in multiary quasigroups: the way of biased expansions. ''
Aequationes Mathematicae ''Aequationes Mathematicae'' is a mathematical journal. It is primarily devoted to functional equations, but also publishes papers in dynamical systems, combinatorics, and geometry. As well as publishing regular journal submissions on these topic ...
'', Vol. 83, pp. 1–66. Graph families Matroid theory