
TL;DR
This paper introduces a new polynomial-time computable graph distance called the tree distance, based on fractional isomorphism and homomorphism densities, extending fundamental graph limit theorems and answering open questions.
Contribution
It establishes a novel connection between fractional isomorphism, tree homomorphism densities, and graph distances, extending graph limit theory.
Findings
Tree distance can be computed in polynomial time.
Fractional isomorphism corresponds to equal tree homomorphism densities.
The paper generalizes results to graphons and addresses open questions.
Abstract
We introduce the tree distance, a new distance measure on graphs. The tree distance can be computed in polynomial time with standard methods from convex optimization. It is based on the notion of fractional isomorphism, a characterization based on a natural system of linear equations whose integer solutions correspond to graph isomorphism. By results of Tinhofer (1986, 1991) and Dvo\v{r}\'ak (2010), two graphs G and H are fractionally isomorphic if and only if, for every tree T, the number of homomorphisms from T to G equals the corresponding number from T to H, which means that the tree distance of G and H is zero. Our main result is that this correspondence between the equivalence relations "fractional isomorphism" and "equal tree homomorphism densities" can be extended to a correspondence between the associated distance measures. Our result is inspired by a similar result due to…
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