Bidirected graph

Bidirected graph

In the mathematical domain of graph theory, a bidirected graph (introduced by harvnb|Edmonds|Johnson|1970) is a graph in which each edge is given an independent orientation (or direction, or arrow) at each end. Thus, there are three kinds of bidirected edges: those where the arrows point outward, towards the vertices, at both ends; those where both arrows point inward, away from the vertices; and those in which one arrow points away from its vertex and towards the opposite end, while the other arrow points in the same direction as the first, away from the opposite end and towards its own vertex.

Edges of these three types may be called, respectively, extraverted, introverted, and directed. The "directed" edges are the same as ordinary directed edges in a directed graph; thus, a directed graph is a special kind of bidirected graph.

It is sometimes desirable to have also edges with only one end (half-edges); these get only one arrow. An edge with no ends (a loose edge) has no arrows. The edges that are neither half nor loose edges may be called ordinary edges.

ee also

* Skew-symmetric graph
* Signed graph

References

*citation
last1 = Edmonds | first1 = Jack | authorlink1 = Jack Edmonds
last2 = Johnson | first2 = Ellis L.
contribution = Matching: a well-solved class of linear programs
title = Combinatorial Structures and their Applications: Proceedings of the Calgary Symposium, June 1969
publisher = Gordon and Breach | location = New York | year = 1970
. Reprinted in "Combinatorial Optimization — Eureka, You Shrink!", Springer-Verlag, Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2570, 2003, pp. 27–30, .


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • bidirected — adjective Describing a graph, each of whose edge has an independent orientation at each end …   Wiktionary

  • Skew-symmetric graph — In graph theory, a branch of mathematics, a skew symmetric graph is a directed graph that is isomorphic to its own transpose graph, the graph formed by reversing all of its edges. The isomorphism is required to be an involution without any fixed… …   Wikipedia

  • Signed graph — In the area of graph theory in mathematics, a signed graph is a graph in which each edge has a positive or negative sign.Formally, a signed graph Sigma; is a pair ( G , sigma;) that consists of a graph G = ( V , E ) and a sign mapping or… …   Wikipedia

  • Matching (graph theory) — In the mathematical discipline of graph theory, a matching or independent edge set in a graph is a set of edges without common vertices. It may also be an entire graph consisting of edges without common vertices. Covering packing dualities… …   Wikipedia

  • Ancestral graph — An ancestral graph is a graph with three types of edges: directed edge, bidirected edge, and undirected edge such that it can be decomposed into three parts: an undirected subgraph, a directed subgraph, and directed edges pointing from the… …   Wikipedia

  • Quasi-bipartite graph — In the mathematical field of graph theory, an instance of the Steiner tree problem (consisting of an undirected graph G and a set R of terminal vertices that must be connected to each other) is said to be quasi bipartite if the non terminal… …   Wikipedia

  • Incidence matrix — In mathematics, an incidence matrix is a matrix that shows the relationship between two classes of objects. If the first class is X and the second is Y, the matrix has one row for each element of X and one column for each element of Y. The entry… …   Wikipedia

  • List of mathematics articles (B) — NOTOC B B spline B* algebra B* search algorithm B,C,K,W system BA model Ba space Babuška Lax Milgram theorem Baby Monster group Baby step giant step Babylonian mathematics Babylonian numerals Bach tensor Bach s algorithm Bachmann–Howard ordinal… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”