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Hypertree

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Generalization of tree graphs to hypergraphs For other uses, see Hypertree (disambiguation).
A hypertree (blue vertices and yellow hyperedges) and its host tree (red)

In the mathematical field of graph theory, a hypergraph H is called a hypertree if it admits a host graph T such that T is a tree. In other words, H is a hypertree if there exists a tree T such that every hyperedge of H is the set of vertices of a connected subtree of T. Hypertrees have also been called arboreal hypergraphs or tree hypergraphs.

Every tree T is itself a hypertree: T itself can be used as the host graph, and every edge of T is a subtree of this host graph. Therefore, hypertrees may be seen as a generalization of the notion of a tree for hypergraphs. They include the connected Berge-acyclic hypergraphs, which have also been used as a (different) generalization of trees for hypergraphs.

Properties

Every hypertree has the Helly property (2-Helly property): if a subset S of its hyperedges has the property that every two hyperedges in S have a nonempty intersection, then S itself has a nonempty intersection (a vertex that belongs to all hyperedges in S).

By results of Duchet, Flament and Slater hypertrees may be equivalently characterized in the following ways.

It is possible to recognize hypertrees (as duals of alpha-acyclic hypergraphs) in linear time. The exact cover problem (finding a set of non-overlapping hyperedges that covers all the vertices) is solvable in polynomial time for hypertrees but remains NP-complete for alpha-acyclic hypergraphs.

See also

Notes

  1. Brandstädt et al. (1998)
  2. Berge (1989)
  3. McKee & McMorris (1999)
  4. Berge (1989); Voloshin (2002)
  5. Berge (1989); Voloshin (2002)
  6. See, e.g., Brandstädt, Le & Spinrad (1999); McKee & McMorris (1999)
  7. Berge (1989)
  8. Fagin (1983)
  9. Tarjan & Yannakakis (1984).
  10. Brandstädt, Leitert & Rautenbach (2012)

References

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