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First-order transducibility among classes of sparse graphs

Published: May 21, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2505.15655v1

By: Jakub Gajarský , Jeremi Gładkowski , Jan Jedelský and more

Potential Business Impact:

Makes computers understand complex shapes better.

Business Areas:
Telecommunications Hardware

We prove several negative results about first-order transducibility for classes of sparse graphs: - for every $t \in \mathbb{N}$, the class of graphs of treewidth at most $t+1$ is not transducible from the class of graphs of treewidth at most $t$; - for every $t \in \mathbb{N}$, the class of graphs with Hadwiger number at most $t+2$ is not transducible from the class of graphs with Hadwiger number at most $t$; and - the class of graphs of treewidth at most $4$ is not transducible from the class of planar graphs. These results are obtained by combining the known upper and lower bounds on the weak coloring numbers of the considered graph classes with the following two new observations: - If a weakly sparse graph class $\mathscr D$ is transducible from a class $\mathscr C$ of bounded expansion, then for some $k \in \mathbb{N}$, every graph $G \in \mathscr D$ is a $k$-congested depth-$k$ minor of a graph $H^\circ$ obtained from some $H\in \mathscr C$ by adding a universal vertex. - The operations of adding a universal vertex and of taking $k$-congested depth-$k$ minors, for a fixed $k$, preserve the degree of the distance-$d$ weak coloring number of a graph class, understood as a polynomial in $d$.

Country of Origin
🇨🇿 Czech Republic

Page Count
13 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Logic in Computer Science