Matroid Theory
James G. Oxley(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published in December 1992
Book
Hardback
544 pages
978-0-19-853563-8 (ISBN)
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Description
What is the essence of the similarity between forests in a graph and linearly independent sets of columns in a matrix? Why does the greedy algorithm produce a spanning tree of minimum weight in a connected graph? Is it possible to test in polynomial time whether a matrix is totally unimodular? These questions form the basis of Matroid theory. The study of matroids is a branch of discrete mathematics with basic links to graphs, lattices, codes, transversals, and projective geometries. Matroids are of fundamental importance in combinatorial optimization and their applications extend into electrical engineering and statics. This book falls into two parts: the first provides a comprehensive introduction to the basics of matroid theory, while the second treats more advanced topics. The book contains over five hundred exercises and includes, for the first time in one place, short proofs of all but one of the major theorems in the subject. The final chapter lists sixty unsolved problems and describes progress towards their solutions.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
num. line drawings
numerous line drawings
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
937 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-853563-8 (9780198535638)
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James Oxley
Matroid Theory
Book
02/2011
2nd Edition
Oxford University Press
€243.70
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Content
1. Preliminaries; 2. Basic definitions and examples; 3. Duality; 4. Minors; 5. Connectivity; 6. Graphic matroids; 7. Representable matroids; 8. Constructions; 9. Higher connectivity; 10. Binary matroids; 11. Ternary matroids; 12. The Splitter theorem; 13. Submodular functions and matroid union; 14. Regular matroids; 15. Unsolved problems; 16. References; Appendix. Some interesting matroids; Notation; Index