The central theme of this thesis is to prove results about infinite mathematical objects by studying the behaviour of their finite substructures.
In particular, we study B-matroids, which are an infinite generalization of matroids introduced by Higgs \cite{higgs}, and graph-like spaces, which are topological
spaces resembling graphs, introduced by Thomassen and Vella \cite{thomassenvella}.
Recall that the circuit matroid of a finite graph is a matroid defined on the edges of the graph, with a set of edges being independent if it contains
no circuit. It turns out that graph-like continua and infinite graphs both have circuit B-matroids. The first main result of this thesis is a generalization of
Whitney's Theorem that a graph has an abstract dual if and only if it is planar. We show that an infinite graph has an abstract dual (which is a graph-like
continuum) if and only if it is planar, and also that a graph-like continuum has an abstract dual (which is an infinite graph) if and only if it is planar.
This generalizes theorems of Thomassen (\cite{thomassendual}) and Bruhn and Diestel (\cite{bruhndiestel}). The difficult part of the proof is extending
Tutte's characterization of graphic matroids (\cite{tutte2}) to finitary or co-finitary B-matroids. In order to prove this characterization, we introduce a technique for
obtaining these B-matroids as the limit of a sequence of finite minors.
In \cite{tutte}, Tutte proved important theorems about the peripheral (induced and non-separating) circuits of a $3$-connected graph. He showed that for
any two edges of a $3$-connected graph there is a peripheral circuit containing one but not the other, and that the peripheral circuits of a $3$-connected
graph generate its cycle space. These theorems were generalized to $3$-connected binary matroids by Bixby and Cunningham (\cite{bixbycunningham}).
We generalize both of these theorems to $3$-connected binary co-finitary B-matroids.
Richter, Rooney and Thomassen \cite{richterrooneythomassen} showed that a locally connected, compact metric space has an embedding in the sphere unless it contains a subspace homeomorphic
to $K_5$ or $K_{3,3}$, or one of a small number of other obstructions. We are able to extend this result to an arbitrary surface $\Sigma$; a locally
connected, compact metric space embeds in $\Sigma$ unless it contains a subspace homeomorphic to a finite graph which does not embed in $\Sigma$, or
one of a small number of other obstructions.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:WATERLOO/oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/5735 |
Date | January 2010 |
Creators | Christian, Robin |
Source Sets | University of Waterloo Electronic Theses Repository |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis or Dissertation |
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