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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
71

The Linear Cutwidth and Cyclic Cutwidth of Complete n-Partite Graphs

Creswell, Stephanie A 01 June 2014 (has links)
The cutwidth of different graphs is a topic that has been extensively studied. The basis of this paper is the cutwidth of complete n-partite graphs. While looking at the cutwidth of complete n-partite graphs, we strictly consider the linear embedding and cyclic embedding. The relationship between the linear cutwidth and the cyclic cutwidth is discussed and used throughout multiple proofs of different cases for the cyclic cutwidth. All the known cases for the linear and cyclic cutwidth of complete bipartite, complete tripartite, and complete n-partite graphs are highlighted. The main focus of this paper is to expand on the cyclic cutwidth of complete tripartite graphs. Using the relationship of the linear cutwidth and cyclic cutwidth of any graph, we find a lower bound and an upper bound for the cyclic cutwidth of complete tripartite graph K_(r,r,pr) where r is odd and p is a natural number. Throughout this proof there are two cases that develop, p even and p odd. Within each case we have to consider the cuts of multiple regions to find the maximum cut of the cyclic embedding. Once all regions within each case are considered, we discover that the upper and lower bounds are equivalent. This discovery of the cyclic cutwidth of complete tripartite graph K_(r,r,pr) where r is odd and p is a natural number results in getting one step closer to finding the cyclic cutwidth of any complete tripartite graph K_(r,s,t).
72

Ádám's Conjecture and Arc Reversal Problems

Salas, Claudio D 01 June 2016 (has links)
A. Ádám conjectured that for any non-acyclic digraph D, there exists an arc whose reversal reduces the total number of cycles in D. In this thesis we characterize and identify structure common to all digraphs for which Ádám's conjecture holds. We investigate quasi-acyclic digraphs and verify that Ádám's conjecture holds for such digraphs. We develop the notions of arc-cycle transversals and reversal sets to classify and quantify this structure. It is known that Ádám's conjecture does not hold for certain infinite families of digraphs. We provide constructions for such counterexamples to Ádám's conjecture. Finally, we address a conjecture of Reid [Rei84] that Ádám's conjecture is true for tournaments that are 3-arc-connected but not 4-arc-connected.
73

Tutte-Equivalent Matroids

Rocha, Maria Margarita 01 September 2018 (has links)
We begin by introducing matroids in the context of finite collections of vectors from a vector space over a specified field, where the notion of independence is linear independence. Then we will introduce the concept of a matroid invariant. Specifically, we will look at the Tutte polynomial, which is a well-defined two-variable invariant that can be used to determine differences and similarities between a collection of given matroids. The Tutte polynomial can tell us certain properties of a given matroid (such as the number of bases, independent sets, etc.) without the need to manually solve for them. Although the Tutte polynomial gives us significant information about a matroid, it does not uniquely determine a matroid. This thesis will focus on non-isomorphic matroids that have the same Tutte polynomial. We call such matroids Tutte-equivalent, and we will study the characteristics needed for two matroids to be Tutte-equivalent. Finally, we will demonstrate methods to construct families of Tutte-equivalent matroids.
74

Pascal's Triangle, Pascal's Pyramid, and the Trinomial Triangle

Saucedo, Antonio, Jr. 01 June 2019 (has links)
Many properties have been found hidden in Pascal's triangle. In this paper, we will present several known properties in Pascal's triangle as well as the properties that lift to different extensions of the triangle, namely Pascal's pyramid and the trinomial triangle. We will tailor our interest towards Fermat numbers and the hockey stick property. We will also show the importance of the hockey stick properties by using them to prove a property in the trinomial triangle.
75

3-Maps And Their Generalizations

McCall, Kevin J 01 January 2018 (has links)
A 3-map is a 3-region colorable map. They have been studied by Craft and White in their paper 3-maps. This thesis introduces topological graph theory and then investigates 3-maps in detail, including examples, special types of 3-maps, the use of 3-maps to find the genus of special graphs, and a generalization known as n-maps.
76

Computational Circle Packing: Geometry and Discrete Analytic Function Theory

Orick, Gerald Lee 01 May 2010 (has links)
Geometric Circle Packings are of interest not only for their aesthetic appeal but also their relation to discrete analytic function theory. This thesis presents new computational methods which enable additional practical applications for circle packing geometry along with providing a new discrete analytic interpretation of the classical Schwarzian derivative and traditional univalence criterion of classical analytic function theory. To this end I present a new method of computing the maximal packing and solving the circle packing layout problem for a simplicial 2-complex along with additional geometric variants and applications. This thesis also presents a geometric discrete Schwarzian quantity whose value is associated with the classical Schwarzian derivative. Following Hille, I present a characterization of circle packings as the ratio of two linearly independent solutions of a discrete difference equation taking the discrete Schwarzian as a parameter. This characterization then gives a discrete interpretation of the classical univalence criterion of Nehari in the circle packing setting.
77

An Algorithm to Generate Two-Dimensional Drawings of Conway Algebraic Knots

Tung, Jen-Fu 01 May 2010 (has links)
The problem of finding an efficient algorithm to create a two-dimensional embedding of a knot diagram is not an easy one. Typically, knots with a large number of crossings will not nicely generate two-dimensional drawings. This thesis presents an efficient algorithm to generate a knot and to create a nice two-dimensional embedding of the knot. For the purpose of this thesis a drawing is “nice” if the number of tangles in the diagram consisting of half-twists is minimal. More specifically, the algorithm generates prime, alternating Conway algebraic knots in O(n) time where n is the number of crossings in the knot, and it derives a precise representation of the knot’s nice drawing in O(n) time (The rendering of the drawing is not O(n).). Central to the algorithm is a special type of rooted binary tree which represents a distinct prime, alternating Conway algebraic knot. Each leaf in the tree represents a crossing in the knot. The algorithm first generates the tree and then modifies such a tree repeatedly to reduce the number of its leaves while ensuring that the knot type associated with the tree is not modified. The result of the algorithm is a tree (for the knot) with a minimum number of leaves. This minimum tree is the basis of deriving a 4-regular plane map which represents the knot embedding and to finally draw the knot’s diagram.
78

Expectation Numbers of Cyclic Groups

El-Farrah, Miriam Mahannah 01 July 2015 (has links)
When choosing k random elements from a group the kth expectation number is the expected size of the subgroup generated by those specific elements. The main purpose of this thesis is to study the asymptotic properties for the first and second expectation numbers of large cyclic groups. The first chapter introduces the kth expectation number. This formula allows us to determine the expected size of any group. Explicit examples and computations of the first and second expectation number are given in the second chapter. Here we show example of both cyclic and dihedral groups. In chapter three we discuss arithmetic functions which are crucial to computing the first and second expectation numbers. The fourth chapter is where we introduce and prove asymptotic results for the first expectation number of large cyclic groups. The asymptotic results for the second expectation number of cyclic groups is given in the fifth chapter. Finally, the results are summarized and future work for expectation numbers is discussed.
79

COMBINATORIAL ASPECTS OF EXCEDANCES AND THE FROBENIUS COMPLEX

Clark, Eric Logan 01 January 2011 (has links)
In this dissertation we study the excedance permutation statistic. We start by extending the classical excedance statistic of the symmetric group to the affine symmetric group eSn and determine the generating function of its distribution. The proof involves enumerating lattice points in a skew version of the root polytope of type A. Next we study the excedance set statistic on the symmetric group by defining a related algebra which we call the excedance algebra. A combinatorial interpretation of expansions from this algebra is provided. The second half of this dissertation deals with the topology of the Frobenius complex, that is the order complex of a poset whose definition was motivated by the classical Frobenius problem. We determine the homotopy type of the Frobenius complex in certain cases using discrete Morse theory. We end with an enumeration of Q-factorial posets. Open questions and directions for future research are located at the end of each chapter.
80

Boij-Söderberg Decompositions, Cellular Resolutions, and Polytopes

Sturgeon, Stephen 01 January 2014 (has links)
Boij-Söderberg theory shows that the Betti table of a graded module can be written as a linear combination of pure diagrams with integer coefficients. In chapter 2 using Ferrers hypergraphs and simplicial polytopes, we provide interpretations of these coefficients for ideals with a d-linear resolution, their quotient rings, and for Gorenstein rings whose resolution has essentially at most two linear strands. We also establish a structural result on the decomposition in the case of quasi-Gorenstein modules. These results are published in the Journal of Algebra, see [25]. In chapter 3 we provide some further results about Boij-Söderberg decompositions. We show how truncation of a pure diagram impacts the decomposition. We also prove constructively that every integer multiple of a pure diagram of codimension 2 can be realized as the Betti table of a module. In chapter 4 we introduce the idea of a c-polar self-dual polytope. We prove that in dimension 2 only the odd n-gons have an embedding which is polar self-dual. We also define the family of Ferrers polytopes. We prove that the Ferrers polytope in dimension d is d-polar self-dual hence establishing a nontrivial example of a polar self-dual polytope in all dimension. Finally we prove that the Ferrers polytope in dimension d supports a cellular resolution of the Stanley-Reisner ring of the (d+3)-gon.

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