On operations preserving semi-transitive orientability of graphs
Ilkyoo Choi, Jinha Kim, and Minki Kim

TL;DR
This paper investigates which graph operations preserve semi-transitive orientability, proving that edge modifications do, while certain graph products do not, and explores conditions for preservation.
Contribution
It establishes that edge-deletions, additions, and liftings preserve semi-transitive orientability and provides conditions under which other operations do so.
Findings
Edge-deletions, additions, and liftings preserve semi-transitive orientability.
Tensor, lexicographic, and strong products do not preserve semi-transitive orientability.
Initial semi-transitive orientations can be extended after certain graph operations.
Abstract
We consider the class of semi-transitively orientable graphs, which is a much larger class of graphs compared to transitively orientable graphs, in other words, comparability graphs. Ever since the concept of a semi-transitive orientation was defined as a crucial ingredient of the characterization of alternation graphs, also knownas word-representable graphs, it has sparked independent interest. In this paper, we investigate graph operations and graph products that preserve semitransitive orientability of graphs. The main theme of this paper is to determine which graph operations satisfy the following statement: if a graph operation is possible on a semitransitively orientable graph, then the same graph operation can be executed on the graph while preserving the semi-transitive orientability. We were able to prove that this statement is true for edge-deletions, edge-additions, and…
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