Introduction to graph and hypergraph theory
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Introduction to graph and hypergraph theory
Nova Science Publishers, c2009
- : hard
Available at / 7 libraries
-
Hokkaido University, Library, Graduate School of Science, Faculty of Science and School of Science数学
: hard/V 8872080206294
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book is for math and computer science majors, for students and representatives of many other disciplines (like bioinformatics, for example) taking courses in graph theory, discrete mathematics, data structures, algorithms. It is also for anyone who wants to understand the basics of graph theory, or just is curious. No previous knowledge in graph theory or any other significant mathematics is required. The very basic facts from set theory, proof techniques and algorithms are sufficient to understand it; but even those are explained in the text. Structurally, the text is divided into two parts where Part II is the generalisation of Part I. The first part discusses the key concepts of graph theory with emphasis on trees, bipartite graphs, cycles, chordal graphs, planar graphs and graph colouring. The second part considers generalisations of Part I and discusses hypertrees, bipartite hypergraphs, hypercycles, chordal hypergraphs, planar hypergraphs and hypergraph colouring. There is an interaction between the parts and within the parts to show how ideas of generalisations work. The main point is to exhibit the ways of generalisations and interactions of mathematical concepts from the very simple to the most advanced. One of the features of this text is the duality of hypergraphs. This fundamental concept is missing in graph theory (and in its introductory teaching) because dual graphs are not properly graphs, they are hypergraphs. However, as Part II shows, the duality is a very powerful tool in understanding, simplifying and unifying many combinatorial relations; it is basically a look at the same structure from the opposite (vertices versus edges) point of view.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Basic Definitions and Concepts
- Trees and Bipartite Graphs
- Chordal Graphs
- Planar Graphs
- Graph Coloring
- Traversals and Flows
- Basic Hypergraph Concepts
- Hypertrees and Chordal Hypergraphs
- Some Other Remarkable Hypergraph Classes
- Hypergraph Coloring
- Modeling with Hypergraphs
- Appendix
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"