On representable graphs, semi-transitive orientations, and the representation numbers
Magnus Mar Halldorsson, Sergey Kitaev, Artem Pyatkin

TL;DR
This paper characterizes representable graphs via semi-transitive orientations, establishes bounds on their representation number, and explores their properties including 3-colorability and specific graph cases like the Petersen graph.
Contribution
It introduces a new characterization of representable graphs through semi-transitive orientations and provides bounds on their representation number, advancing understanding of their structure.
Findings
A graph is representable iff it admits a semi-transitive orientation.
The representation number of an n-node graph is at most n.
3-colorable graphs are representable.
Abstract
A graph is representable if there exists a word over the alphabet such that letters and alternate in if and only if for each . If is -uniform (each letter of occurs exactly times in it) then is called -representable. It was shown that a graph is representable if and only if it is -representable for some . Minimum for which a representable graph is -representable is called its representation number. In this paper we give a characterization of representable graphs in terms of orientations. Namely, we show that a graph is representable if and only if it admits an orientation into a so-called \emph{semi-transitive digraph}. This allows us to prove a number of results about representable graphs, not the least that 3-colorable graphs are representable. We also prove that the representation number of a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Graph Theory Research · Graph Labeling and Dimension Problems · Fuzzy and Soft Set Theory
