The complexity of testing all properties of planar graphs, and the role of isomorphism
Sabyasachi Basu, Akash Kumar, C. Seshadhri

TL;DR
This paper establishes that testing all properties of bounded degree planar graphs requires exponential query complexity in 1/ε, with isomorphism testing being the hardest property, and extends results to bounded treewidth graphs.
Contribution
It provides tight upper and lower bounds on the query complexity for testing properties of planar and bounded treewidth graphs, identifying isomorphism testing as the most challenging property.
Findings
Testing all properties of planar graphs requires exponential queries in 1/ε.
Isomorphism to a fixed graph is the hardest property among planar graphs.
Similar bounds are established for bounded treewidth graphs.
Abstract
Consider property testing on bounded degree graphs and let denote the proximity parameter. A remarkable theorem of Newman-Sohler (SICOMP 2013) asserts that all properties of planar graphs (more generally hyperfinite) are testable with query complexity only depending on . Recent advances in testing minor-freeness have proven that all additive and monotone properties of planar graphs can be tested in queries. Some properties falling outside this class, such as Hamiltonicity, also have a similar complexity for planar graphs. Motivated by these results, we ask: can all properties of planar graphs can be tested in queries? Is there a uniform query complexity upper bound for all planar properties, and what is the "hardest" such property to test? We discover a surprisingly clean and optimal answer. Any property of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Optimization and Search Problems
