Jump to content

Matroid

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kriega (talk | contribs) at 16:19, 15 August 2011 (Closure operators). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In combinatorics, a branch of mathematics, a matroid (/[invalid input: 'icon']ˈmtrɔɪd/) or independence structure is a structure that captures the essence of a notion of "independence" that generalizes linear independence in vector spaces.

There are many equivalent ways to define a matroid, and many concepts within matroid theory have a variety of equivalent formulations. Depending on the sophistication of the concept, it may be nontrivial to show that the different formulations are equivalent, a phenomenon sometimes called cryptomorphism. Significant definitions of matroid include those in terms of independent sets, bases, circuits, closed sets or flats, closure operators, and rank functions.

Matroid theory borrows extensively from the terminology of linear algebra and graph theory, largely because it is the abstraction of various notions of central importance in these fields.

Formal definitions of finite matroids

There are dozens of equivalent ways to define a (finite) matroid. Here are some of the most important. There is no one preferred or customary definition; in that respect, matroids differ from many other mathematical structures, such as groups and topologies.

Independent sets, bases, and circuits

One of the most valuable definitions is that given in terms of independence. In this definition a finite matroid M is a pair (EI), where E is a finite set (called the ground set) and I is a collection of subsets of E (called the independent sets) with the following properties:

  1. The empty set is independent, i.e., ∅ ∈ I. (Alternatively, at least one subset of E is independent, i.e., I ≠ ∅.)
  2. Every subset of an independent set is independent, i.e., for each A'  ⊆ A  ⊆ E, A ∈ I → A'  ∈ I. This is sometimes called the hereditary property.
  3. If A and B are two independent sets of I and A has more elements than B, then there exists an element in A which is not in B that when added to B still gives an independent set. This is sometimes called the augmentation property or the independent set exchange property.

The first two properties are simple, and define a combinatorial structure known as an independence system, but the motivation behind the third property is not obvious. The examples in the example section below will make its motivation clearer.

A subset of the ground set E that is not independent is called dependent. A maximal independent set—that is, an independent set which becomes dependent on adding any element of E—is called a basis for the matroid. It is a basic result of matroid theory, directly analogous to a similar theorem of linear algebra, that any two bases of a matroid M have the same number of elements. This number is called the rank of M.

A circuit in a matroid M is a minimal dependent subset of E—that is, a dependent set whose proper subsets are all independent. In spite of the similarity to the definition of basis this notion has no analogue in classical linear algebra. The terminology comes from graph theory; see below.

The dependent sets, the bases, or the circuits of a matroid characterize the matroid completely. Furthermore, the collection of dependent sets, or of bases, or of circuits each has simple properties that may be taken as axioms for a matroid. For instance, one may define a matroid M to be a pair (EB), where E is a finite set as before and B is a collection of subsets of E, called "bases", with the following properties:

  1. B is nonempty.
  2. No member of B is a proper subset of another.
  3. If A and B are distinct members of B and a is an element of A not belonging to B, then there exists an element b belonging to B-A such that A − a + b is a basis. (This property is called the basis exchange property.)

Rank functions

If M is a matroid on E, and A is a subset of E, then a matroid on A can be defined by considering a subset of A independent if and only if it is independent in M. This allows us to talk about submatroids and about the rank of any subset of E.

The rank function r assigns a non-negative integer to every subset of E and has the following properties:

  1. r(A) ≤ |A| for all subsets A of E. (Cardinality bound)
  2. If A and B are subsets of E with AB, then r(A) ≤ r(B). (Increase)
  3. For any two subsets A and B of E, we have r(AB) + r(AB) ≤ r(A) + r(B). (Submodularity)

These three properties can be used as one of the alternative definitions of a finite matroid: the independent sets are then defined as those subsets A of E with r(A) = |A|.

The difference |A| − r(A) is called the nullity of the subset A. It is the minimum number of elements that must be removed from A to obtain an independent set. The nullity of E in M is called the nullity of M.

Closure operators

Let M be a matroid on a finite set E, defined as above. The closure cl(A) of a subset A of E is the subset of E containing A and every element x in E\A, such that there is a circuit C containing x and contained in the union of A and {x}. This defines the closure operator, from P(E) to P(E), where P denotes the power set.

The closure operator cl from P(E) to P(E) has the following property:

  • For all elements a, b of E and all subsets Y of E, if a is in cl(Y ∪ b) \ cl(Y), then b is in cl(Y ∪ a) \ cl(Y. This is sometimes called the Mac Lane–Steinitz exchange property.

In fact this may be taken as another definition of matroid – any closure operator on E with this property determines a matroid on E.

Closed sets (flats)

A set whose closure equals itself is said to be closed, or a flat of the matroid. The closed sets of a matroid are characterized by a covering partition property:

  • The whole point set E is closed.
  • If S and T are flats, then S ∩ T is a flat.
  • If S is a flat, then the flats T that cover S, i.e., T properly contains S but there is no flat U between S and T, partition the elements of E − S.

The class L(M) of all flats, partially ordered by set inclusion, forms a matroid lattice. Conversely, the set A of atoms of any matroid lattice L form a matroid under the following closure operator: for a set S of atoms whose join in L is x,

cl(S) = {a ∈ A | a ≤ x}.

Equivalently, the flats of the matroid are the sets

{aA | a ≤ x} for x ∈ L.

Thus, the lattice of flats of this matroid is naturally isomorphic to L.

Examples

Simple matroids

A matroid is called simple if it has no circuits consisting of 1 or 2 elements. That is, it has no loops and no parallel elements.

Uniform matroids

Let E be a finite set and k a natural number. One may define a matroid on E by taking every k-element subset of E to be a basis. This is known as the uniform matroid of rank k. All uniform matroids of rank at least 2 are simple.

The uniform matroid of rank 2 on n points is called the n-point line.

A matroid is uniform if and only if it has no circuits of size less than the one plus the rank of the matroid.

Discrete matroids

A matroid is called discrete if every element is a loop or a coloop. Equivalently, every proper, non-empty subset of the ground set E is a separator (loop, coloop, and separator are defined in Additional Terminology below).

Matroids from linear algebra

Matroid theory developed mainly out of a deep examination of the properties of independence and dimension in vector spaces. Matroids from vector spaces are still the main examples. There are two ways to present them.

  • If E is any finite subset of a vector space V, then we can define a matroid M on E by taking the independent sets of M to be the linearly independent subsets of E. We say the set E represents M. Matroids of this kind are called vector matroids.
  • A matrix A with entries in a field gives rise to a matroid M on its set of columns. The dependent sets of columns in the matroid are those that are linearly dependent as vectors. This matroid is called the column matroid of A, and A is said to represent M. Column matroids are just vector matroids under another name, but there are often reasons to favor the matrix representation. (There is one technical difference: a column matroid can have distinct elements that are the same vector, but a vector matroid as defined above cannot. Usually this difference is insignificant and can be ignored, but by letting E be a multiset of vectors one brings the two definitions into complete agreement.)

A matroid that is equivalent to a vector matroid, although it may be presented differently, is called representable. If M is equivalent to a vector matroid over a field F, then we say M is representable over F ; in particular, M is real-representable if it is representable over the real numbers. For instance, although a graphic matroid (see below) is presented in terms of a graph, it is also representable by vectors over any field. A basic problem in matroid theory is to determine whether a given matroid M is representable over a given field F. Whitney found one solution to this problem when F is a field with two elements (see "Binary matroids", below), but the general situation is famously complicated. The main results so far are characterizations of binary matroids due to Tutte (1950s), of ternary matroids (representable over the 3-element field) due to Reid and Bixby, and separately to Seymour (1970s), and of quaternary matroids (representable over the 4-element field) due to Geelen, Gerards, and Kapoor (2000). This is very much an open area.

Matroids from graph theory

A second original source for the theory of matroids is graph theory.

Every finite graph (or multigraph) G gives rise to a matroid as follows: take as E the set of all edges in G and consider a set of edges independent if and only if it does not contain a simple cycle. Such an edge set is called a forest in graph theory. This is called the cycle matroid or graphic matroid of G ; it is usually written M(G). The graphic matroid of G can also be defined as the column matroid of any oriented incidence matrix of G.

Any matroid that is equivalent to the cycle matroid of a (multi)graph, even if it is not presented in terms of graphs, is called a graphic matroid. The matroids that are graphic have been characterized by Tutte.

Other matroids on graphs were discovered subsequently.

  1. The bicircular matroid of a graph is defined by calling a set of edges independent if every connected subset contains at most one cycle.
  2. In any directed or undirected graph G let E and F be two distinguished sets of vertices. In the set E, define a subset U to be independent if there are |U| vertex-disjoint paths from F onto U. This defines a matroid on E called a gammoid.

Matroids from biased graphs

Graphic matroids have been generalized to matroids from signed graphs, gain graphs, and biased graphs. A graph G with a distinguished linear class B of cycles, known as a "biased graph" (G,B), has two matroids, known as the frame matroid and the lift matroid of the biased graph. If every cycle belongs to the distinguished class, these matroids coincide with the cycle matroid of G. If no cycle is distinguished, the frame matroid is the bicircular matroid of G.

A signed graph, whose edges are labeled by signs, and a gain graph, which is a graph whose edges are labeled orientably from a group, each give rise to a biased graph and therefore have frame and lift matroids.

Frame matroids

A matroid M is called a frame matroid if it, or a matroid that contains it, has a basis such that all the points of M are contained in the lines that join pairs of basis elements.

Transversal matroids

Given a set of "points", E, and a class A of subsets of E, a transversal of A is a subset S of E such that there is a one-to-one function f from S to A by which x belongs to f (x) for each x in S. (A may have repeated members, which are treated as separate subsets of E.) The set of transversals forms the class of independent sets of a matroid, called the transversal matroid of (E, A). These matroids are a special simple case of the Gammoid structures defined above. Simply define a bipartite graph with A on the left, E on the right, and join X in A to x in E if x is an element of X. The distinguished sets in the gammoid are A and E respectively.

Matroids from field extensions

A third original source of matroid theory is field theory.

An extension of a field gives rise to a matroid. Suppose F and K are fields with K containing F. Let E be any finite subset of K. Define a subset S of E to be independent if the extension field F[S] has transcendence degree equal to |S|.

A matroid that is equivalent to a matroid of this kind is called an algebraic matroid. The problem of characterizing algebraic matroids is extremely difficult; little is known about it.

The Fano matroid

Fano matroid

Matroids with a small number of elements are often portrayed with a diagram. The dots are the elements of the underlying set, and a curve has been drawn through every 3-element circuit. The diagram shows a rank 3 matroid called the Fano matroid, an example that appeared in the original 1935 paper of Whitney.

The name arises from the fact that the Fano matroid is the projective plane of order 2, known as the Fano plane, whose coordinate field is the 2-element field. This means the Fano matroid is the vector matroid associated to the seven nonzero vectors in a three-dimensional vector space over a field with two elements.

It is known from projective geometry that the Fano matroid is not representable by any set of vectors in a real or complex vector space (or in any vector space over a field whose characteristic differs from 2).

A less famous example is the anti-Fano matroid, defined in the same way as the Fano matroid with the exception that the circle in the above diagram is missing. The anti-Fano matroid is representable over a field if and only if its characteristic differs from 2.

The direct sum of a Fano matroid and an anti-Fano matroid is the simplest example for a matroid which is not representable over any field.

Non-examples

Two maximal three-colorings of different sizes. The one on the left cannot be enlarged because the only remaining vertex is already adjacent to all three colors.

On the other hand, consider this non-example: let E be a set of pairs (v,c) where v ranges over the vertices of a graph and c ranges over the set {red, blue, yellow}. Let the independent sets be the sets of pairs that associate only one color with each vertex and do not associate the same color with two adjacent vertices; that is, they represent valid graph colorings. The empty set is a valid three-coloring, and any subset of a valid three-coloring is a valid three-coloring, but the exchange property does not hold, because it's possible to have two maximal three-colored subgraphs of different sizes, as shown to the right. It's no surprise that this is not a matroid, since if it were, it would give us a greedy algorithm for the NP-complete 3-coloring problem, showing P = NP.

Basic constructions

Let M be a matroid with an underlying set of elements E, and let N be another matroid on underlying set F.

There are some standard ways to make new matroids out of old ones.

  • Restriction. If S is a subset of E, the restriction of M to S, written M |S, is the matroid on underlying set S whose independent sets are the independent sets of M that are contained in S. Its circuits are the circuits of M that are contained in S and its rank function is that of M restricted to subsets of S. In linear algebra, this corresponds to restricting to the subspace generated by the vectors in S.
  • Contraction. If T is a subset of E, the contraction of M by T, written M/T, is the matroid on the underlying set E − T whose rank function is In linear algebra, this corresponds to looking at the quotient space by the linear space generated by the vectors in T, together with the images of the vectors in E - T.
  • Minors. A matroid N that is obtained from M by a sequence of restriction and contraction operations is called a minor of M. We say M contains N as a minor.
  • Direct sum. The direct sum of M and N is the matroid whose underlying set is the disjoint union of E and F, and whose independent sets are the disjoint unions of an independent set of M with an independent set of N.
Theorem. A matroid is the direct sum of its restrictions to its irreducible separators .
  • Matroid union. The union of M and N is the matroid whose underlying set is the union (not the disjoint union) of E and F, and whose independent sets are those subsets which are the union of an independent set in M and one in N. Usually the term "union" is applied when E = F, but that assumption is not essential. If E and F are disjoint, the union is the direct sum.

Additional terminology

Let M be a matroid with an underlying set of elements E.

  • A subset of E spans M if its closure is E. A set is said to span a closed set K if its closure is K.
  • A maximal closed proper subset of E is called a coatom or copoint or hyperplane of M. An equivalent definition: A coatom is a subset of E that does not span M, but such that adding any other element to it does make a spanning set.
  • An element that forms a single-element circuit of M is called a loop. Equivalently, an element is a loop if it belongs to no basis.
  • An element that belongs to no circuit is called a coloop. Equivalently, an element is a coloop if it belongs to every basis.
  • If a two-element set {f, g} is a circuit of M, then f and g are parallel in M.
  • A simple matroid obtained from M by deleting all loops and deleting one element from each 2-element circuit until no 2-element circuits remain is called a simplification of M.
  • A separator of M is a subset S of E such that A proper separator is a separator that is neither E nor the empty set. An irreducible separator is a separator that contains no other non-empty separator. The irreducible separators partition the ground set E.
  • A matroid which cannot be written as the direct sum of two nonempty matroids, or equivalently which has no proper separators, is called connected or irreducible.
  • A maximal irreducible submatroid of M is called a component of M. A component is the restriction of M to an irreducible separator, and contrariwise, the restriction of M to an irreducible separator is a component.

Further topics

Regular matroids

A matroid is regular if it can be represented by a totally unimodular matrix (a matrix whose square submatrices all have determinants equal to 0, 1, or −1). Tutte proved that the following three properties of a matroid are logically equivalent:

  1. M is regular.
  2. M is representable over every field.
  3. M has no minor that is a four-point line or a Fano plane or its dual.

For this he used his difficult homotopy theorem. Simpler proofs have since been found.

Seymour's decomposition theorem states that all regular matroids can be built up in a simple way as the clique-sum of graphic matroids, their duals, and one special matroid. This theorem has major consequences for linear programming involving totally unimodular matrices.

Binary matroids

A matroid that is representable over the two-element field is called a binary matroid. Binary matroids include graphic and regular matroids. They have many of the nice properties of those types of matroid. Whitney and Tutte found famous characterizations. Addition of sets is symmetric difference. The following properties of a matroid M are equivalent:

  1. M is binary.
  2. In M, every sum of circuits is a union of disjoint circuits (Whitney).
  3. M has no minor that is a four-point line (Tutte).

The monograph of Recski compiled 8 equivalent definitions of binary matroids.

Forbidden minors

Suppose L is a list of matroids. The class Ex(L) of all matroids that do not contain as a minor any member of the list is said to be characterized by forbidden minors (or excluded minors). Some of the great theorems of matroid theory characterize natural classes of matroids by forbidden minors. Three examples due to Tutte are:

  • Binary matroids (see above).
  • Regular matroids (see above).
  • Graphic matroids: the matroids that have no minor that is the four-point line (which is self-dual), the Fano plane or its dual, the dual of the cycle matroid M(K5), or the dual of the cycle matroid M(K3,3).

It is easy to show that the matroids representable over a fixed field can be characterized by a list of forbidden minors. A famous outstanding problem (Rota's conjecture) is to prove that this list is finite for finite fields. This has been solved only for the fields of up to four elements (and the exact lists are known for those fields, but one cannot expect exact lists for larger fields). The problem is significant because there are matroid properties that can be characterized by forbidden minors but not by a finite list of them—for example, the property of being representable over the real numbers. (The nonexistence of any finite set of axioms for real-representable matroids is a famous theorem of Vamos (1978).)

The Robertson–Seymour theorem implies that every matroid property of graphic matroids characterized by a list of forbidden minors can be characterized by a finite list—in other words, if an infinite list L includes the forbidden minors for graphic matroids, then Ex(L) = Ex(L’) for some finite list L’. Strengthening Rota's conjecture, Robertson and Seymour conjectured that a similar theorem holds more generally for the matroids representable over any fixed finite field. So far, this has been proven for matroids with bounded branchwidth (Geelen, Gerards & Whittle 2007).

Matroid duality

If M is a finite matroid, we can define the dual matroid M* by taking the same underlying set and calling a set a basis in M* if and only if its complement is a basis in M. It is not difficult to verify that M* is a matroid and that the dual of M* is M.

The dual can be described equally well in terms of other ways to define a matroid. For instance:

  • A set is independent in M* if and only if its complement spans M.
  • A set is a circuit of M* if and only if its complement is a coatom in M.
  • The rank function of the dual is r*(S) = |S|- r(E) + r(E\S).

A main result is the matroid version of Kuratowski's theorem: The dual of a graphic matroid M is a graphic matroid if and only if M is the matroid of a planar graph. In this case, the dual of M is the matroid of the dual graph of G.

A simpler result is that the dual of a vector matroid representable over a particular field F is also representable over F.

It is known that the dual of a transversal matroid is a strict gammoid and vice versa. See Box 15.2 in the monograph of Recski for the relations among gammoids, strict gammoids, transversal and fundamental transversal matroids

Greedy algorithms

A weight function on a finite set E is a function w: ER+ from E to the nonnegative real numbers. Such a weight function w can be extended to subsets SE by defining

w(S) = ∑sS w(s).

Suppose E is a finite set, F a nonempty family of subsets of E such that any subset of any element of F also belongs to F, and w: FR+ a weight function on F. A greedy algorithm for (E, F, w) is any algorithm that attempts to construct a maximum weight element of F as follows:

1. Let F0 = ∅.
2. For i ≥ 0:
3. Let Zi = { ziE-Fi | Fi ∪ {zi} ∈ F }.
4. If Zi = ∅, terminate and return Fi .
5. Otherwise, choose an element yZi such that w(y) = max{w(zi), ziZi}, let Fi+1 = Fi ∪ {y} and continue.

The following two theorems establish a correspondence between matroids and sets (E, F) as defined above for which greedy algorithms do give maximum weight solutions.

Theorem 1: If E in (E, F, w) is the underlying set of a matroid M and F is the set of independent sets in M, then any greedy algorithm for (E, F, w) constructs a maximum weight element of F.
Theorem 2: If every greedy algorithm for the pair (E, F) constructs a maximum weight element of F for every choice of weight function w: FR+ then F is the set of independent sets of a matroid M with underlying set E.

The notion of matroid has been generalized to allow for other types of sets on which greedy algorithms give optimal solutions; see greedoid for more information.

Infinite matroids

The theory of infinite matroids is much more complicated than that of finite matroids and forms a subject of its own. For a long time, one of the difficulties has been that there were many reasonable and useful definitions, none of which appeared to capture all the important aspects of finite matroid theory. For instance, it seemed to be hard to have bases, circuits, and duality together in one notion of infinite matroids.

The simplest definition of an infinite matroid is to require finite rank; that is, the rank of E is finite. This theory is similar to that of finite matroids except for the failure of duality due to the fact that the dual of an infinite matroid of finite rank does not have finite rank. Finite-rank matroids include any subsets of finite-dimensional vector spaces and of field extensions of finite transcendence degree.

The next simplest infinite generalization is finitary matroids. A matroid is finitary if it has the property that

Equivalently, every dependent set contains a finite dependent set. Examples are linear dependence of arbitrary subsets of infinite-dimensional vector spaces (but not infinite dependencies as in Hilbert and Banach spaces), and algebraic dependence in arbitrary subsets of field extensions of possibly infinite transcendence degree. Again, the class of finitary matroid is not self-dual, because the dual of a finitary matroid is not finitary. Finitary infinite matroids are studied in model theory, a branch of mathematical logic with strong ties to algebra.

In the late 1960s matroid theorists asked for a more general notion that shares the different aspects of finite matroids and generalizes their duality. Many notions of infinite matroids were defined in response to this challenge, but the question remained open. One of the approaches examined by D.A. Higgs became known as B-matroids and was studied by Higgs, Oxley and others in the 1960s and 1970s. According to a recent result by Bruhn, Diestel, Kriesell and Wollan (2010), it solves the problem: Arriving at the same notion independently, they provided four different systems of axioms – in terms of independence, bases, circuits and closure. The duality of B-matroids generalizes dualities that can be observed in infinite graphs.

Polynomial invariants

There are two especially significant polynomials associated to a finite matroid M on the ground set E. Each is a matroid invariant, which means that isomorphic matroids have the same polynomial.

Characteristic polynomial

The characteristic polynomial of M (which is sometimes called the chromatic polynomial, although it does not count colorings), is defined to be

or equivalently (as long as the empty set is closed in M) as

When M is the cycle matroid M(G) of a graph G, the characteristic polynomial is a slight transformation of the chromatic polynomial, which is given by χG (λ) = λcpM(G) (λ), where c is the number of connected components of G.

When M is the bond matroid M*(G) of a graph G, the characteristic polynomial equals the flow polynomial of G.

When M is the matroid of an arrangement A of linear hyperplanes in Rn, the characteristic polynomial of the arrangement is given by pA (λ) = λn−r(M)pM(A) (λ).

Tutte polynomial

The Tutte polynomial of a matroid, TM (x,y), generalizes the characteristic polynomial to two variables. This gives it more combinatorial interpretations, and also gives it the duality property

which implies a number of dualities between properties of M and properties of M *. One definition of the Tutte polynomial is

This expresses the Tutte polynomial as an evaluation of the corank-nullity or rank generating polynomial,

Another definition is in terms of internal and external activities and a sum over bases. This, which sums over fewer subsets but has more complicated terms, was Tutte's original definition.

The Tutte polynomial TG  of a graph is the Tutte polynomial TM(G) of its cycle matroid.

Matroid software

Two systems for calculations with matroids are Kingan's Oid and Hlineny's Macek.

"Oid" is an open source, interactive, extensible software system for experimenting with matroids.

"Macek" is a specialized software system with tools and routines for reasonably efficient combinatorial computations with representable matroids.

History

Matroid theory was introduced by Hassler Whitney (1935). It was also independently discovered by Takeo Nakasawa, whose work was forgotten for many years (Nishimura & Kuroda 2009).

In his seminal paper, Whitney provided two axioms for independence, and defined any structure adhering to these axioms to be "matroids". (Although it was perhaps implied, he did not include an axiom requiring at least one subset to be independent.) His key observation was that these axioms provide an abstraction of "independence" that is common to both graphs and matrices. Because of this, many of the terms used in matroid theory resemble the terms for their analogous concepts in linear algebra or graph theory.

Almost immediately after Whitney first wrote about matroids, an important article was written by Saunders Mac Lane (1936) on the relation of matroids to projective geometry. A year later, Bartel van der Waerden (1937) noted similarities between algebraic and linear dependence in his classic textbook on Modern Algebra.

In the 1940s Richard Rado developed further theory under the name "independence systems" with an eye towards transversal theory, where his name for the subject is still sometimes used.

In the 1950s W. T. Tutte became the foremost figure in matroid theory, a position he retained for many years. His contributions were plentiful, including the characterization of binary, regular, and graphic matroids by excluded minors; the regular-matroid representability theorem; the theory of chain groups and their matroids; and the tools he used to prove many of his results, the "Path Theorem" and "Homotopy Theorem" (see, e.g., Tutte 1965), which are so complex that later theorists have gone to great trouble to eliminate the necessity of using them in proofs. (A fine example is A. M. H. Gerards' short proof (1989) of Tutte's characterization of regular matroids.)

Crapo (1969) and Brylawski (1972) generalized to matroids Tutte's "dichromate", a graphic polynomial now known as the Tutte polynomial (named by Crapo). Their work has recently been followed by a flood of papers—though not as many as on the Tutte polynomial of a graph.

In 1976 Dominic Welsh published the first comprehensive book on matroid theory.

Paul Seymour's decomposition theorem for regular matroids (1980) was the most significant and influential work of the late 1970s and the 1980s. Another fundamental contribution, by Kahn & Kung (1982), showed why projective geometries and Dowling geometries play such an important role in matroid theory.

By this time there were many other important contributors, but one should not omit to mention Geoff Whittle's extension to ternary matroids of Tutte's characterization of binary matroids that are representable over the rationals (Whittle 1995), perhaps the biggest single contribution of the 1990s. In the current decade[when?] the Matroid Minors Project of Geelen, Gerards, Whittle, and others, which attempts to duplicate for matroids that are representable over a finite field the success of the Robertson–Seymour Graph Minors Project (see Robertson–Seymour theorem), has produced substantial advances in the structure theory of matroids. Many others have also contributed to that part of matroid theory, which is presently[when?] flourishing.

See also

Researchers

Mathematicians who pioneered the study of matroids include the following:

Other major contributors include:

There is an on-line list of current researchers.

References

  • Bruhn, Henning; Diestel, Reinhard; Kriesell, Matthias; Wollan, Paul (2010), Axioms for infinite matroids, arXiv:1003.3919v1 [math.CO] {{citation}}: Text "arxiv" ignored (help).
  • Bryant, Victor; Perfect, Hazel (1980), Independence Theory in Combinatorics, London and New York: Chapman and Hall, ISBN 0-412-22430-5.
  • Brylawski, Thomas H. (1972), "A decomposition for combinatorial geometries", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 171, American Mathematical Society: 235–282, doi:10.2307/1996381, JSTOR 1996381.
  • Crapo, Henry H. (1969), "The Tutte polynomial", Aequationes Mathematicae, 3 (3): 211–229, doi:10.1007/BF01817442.
  • Crapo, Henry H.; Rota, Gian-Carlo (1970), On the Foundations of Combinatorial Theory: Combinatorial Geometries, Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, ISBN 9780262530163, MR 0290980.
  • Geelen, Jim; Gerards, A. M. H.; Whittle, Geoff (2007), "Towards a matroid-minor structure theory", in Grimmett, Geoffrey (ed.); et al. (eds.), Combinatorics, Complexity, and Chance: A Tribute to Dominic Welsh, Oxford Lecture Series in Mathematics and its Applications, vol. 34, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 72–82 {{citation}}: |editor= has generic name (help); Explicit use of et al. in: |editor= (help).
  • Gerards, A. M. H. (1989), "A short proof of Tutte's characterization of totally unimodular matrices", Linear Algebra and Applications, 114/115: 207–212, doi:10.1016/0024-3795(89)90461-8.
  • Kahn, Jeff; Kung, Joseph P. S. (1982), "Varieties of combinatorial geometries", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 271 (2), American Mathematical Society: 485–499, doi:10.2307/1998894, JSTOR 1998894.
  • Kingan, Robert; Kingan, Sandra (2005), "A software system for matroids", Graphs and Discovery, DIMACS Series in Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science, pp. 287–296.
  • Kung, Joseph P. S., ed. (1986), A Source Book in Matroid Theory, Boston: Birkhäuser, ISBN 0-8176-3173-9, MR 0890330.
  • Mac Lane, Saunders (1936), "Some interpretations of abstract linear dependence in terms of projective geometry", American Journal of Mathematics, 58 (1), The Johns Hopkins University Press: 236–240, doi:10.2307/2371070, JSTOR 2371070.
  • Nishimura, Hirokazu; Kuroda, Susumu, eds. (2009), A lost mathematician, Takeo Nakasawa. The forgotten father of matroid theory, Basel: Birkhäuser Verlag, ISBN 978-3-7643-8572-9, MR2516551.
  • Oxley, James (1992), Matroid Theory, New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-853563-5, MR 1207587.
  • Recski, András (1989), Matroid Theory and its Applications in Electric Network Theory and in Statics, Berlin and Budapest: Springer-Verlag and Akademiai Kiado, ISBN 3-540-15285-7, MR 1027839{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link).
  • Sapozhenko, A.A. (2001) [1994], "Matroid", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Seymour, Paul D. (1980), "Decomposition of regular matroids", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 28 (3): 305–359, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(80)90075-1.
  • Truemper, Klaus (1992), Matroid Decomposition, Boston: Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-701225-7, MR 1170126.
  • Tutte, W. T. (1959), "Matroids and graphs", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 90 (3), American Mathematical Society: 527–552, doi:10.2307/1993185, JSTOR 1993185, MR 0101527.
  • Tutte, W. T. (1965), "Lectures on matroids.", Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards (U.S.A.), Sect. B, 69: 1–47.
  • Tutte, W. T. (1971), Introduction to the Theory of Matroids, New York: American Elsevier.
  • Vámos, Peter (1978), "The missing axiom of matroid theory is lost forever", Journal of the London Mathematical Society, II. Ser., 18 (3): 403–408, doi:10.1112/jlms/s2-18.3.403.
  • van der Waerden, B. L. (1937), Moderne Algebra.
  • Welsh, D. J. A. (1976), Matroid Theory, Academic Press, ISBN 012744050X.
  • White, Neil, ed. (1986), Theory of Matroids, Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, vol. 26, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521309370.
  • White, Neil, ed. (1992), Matroid Applications, Encyclopedia of Mathematics and its Applications, vol. 40, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521381659.
  • Whitney, Hassler (1935), "On the abstract properties of linear dependence", American Journal of Mathematics, 57 (3), The Johns Hopkins University Press: 509–533, doi:10.2307/2371182, JSTOR 2371182, MR 1507091. Reprinted in Kung (1986), pp. 55–79.
  • Whittle, Geoff (1995), "A characterization of the matroids representable over GF(3) and the rationals" (PDF), Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series B, 65 (2): 222–261, doi:10.1006/jctb.1995.1052.