SFU Discrete Math Seminar: Annie Raymond
Topic
Tropicalization of graph profiles
Speakers
Details
The number of homomorphisms from a graph H to a graph G, denoted by hom(H;G), is the number of maps from V(H) to V(G) that yield a graph homomorphism, i.e., that map every edge of H to an edge of G. Given a fixed collection of finite simple graphs {H_1, ..., H_s}, the graph profile is the set of all vectors (hom(H_1; G), ..., hom(H_s; G)) as G varies over all graphs. Graph profiles essentially allow us to understand all polynomial inequalities in homomorphism numbers that are valid on all graphs. Profiles can be extremely complicated; for instance the full profile of any triple of connected graphs is not known. To simplify these objects, we introduce their tropicalization which we show is a closed convex cone that still captures interesting combinatorial information. We explicitly compute these tropicalizations for some sets of graphs, and relate the results to some questions in extremal graph theory. This is joint work with Greg Blekherman, Mohit Singh and Rekha Thomas.
Additional Information
Time: 2:30pm Pacific
Connection details: Please email the organizers here to request access
Annie Raymond, University of Massachusetts
This is a Past Event
Event Type
Scientific, Seminar
Date
February 1, 2022
Time
-
Location