Bounded diameter tree-decompositions
Eli Berger, Paul Seymour

TL;DR
This paper characterizes when a graph admits a tree-decomposition with small diameter bags, linking it to metric properties like quasi-isometry to a tree and introducing new criteria involving geodesic loaded cycles.
Contribution
It establishes an equivalence between bounded diameter tree-decompositions and quasi-isometry to a tree, connecting graph theory with metric geometry and proving a conjecture by Rose McCarty.
Findings
Equivalence between small diameter tree-decomposition and bounded quasi-isometry to a tree
Characterization of graphs via geodesic loaded cycles and small F
Proof of McCarty's conjecture relating small-radius balls to path intersections
Abstract
When does a graph admit a tree-decomposition in which every bag has small diameter? For finite graphs, this is a property of interest in algorithmic graph theory, where it is called having bounded ``tree-length''. We will show that this is equivalent to being ``boundedly quasi-isometric to a tree'', which for infinite graphs is a much-studied property from metric geometry. One object of this paper is to tie these two areas together. We will prove that there is a tree-decomposition in which each bag has small diameter, if and only if there is a map from into the vertex set of a tree , such that for all , the distances differ by at most a constant. A ``geodesic loaded cycle'' in is a pair , where is a cycle of and , such that for every pair of vertices of , one of the paths of …
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Graph Theory Research · Computational Geometry and Mesh Generation · Advanced Topology and Set Theory
