Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notation
- Chapter 1 Basic concepts
- Chapter 2 Introduction to bipartite graphs
- Chapter 3 Metric properties
- Chapter 4 Connectivity
- Chapter 5 Maximum matchings
- Chapter 6 Expanding properties
- Chapter 7 Subgraphs with restricted degrees
- Chapter 8 Edge colourings
- Chapter 9 Doubly stochastic matrices and bipartite graphs
- Chapter 10 Coverings
- Chapter 11 Some combinatorial applications
- Chapter 12 Bipartite subgraphs of arbitrary graphs
- Appendix
- References
- Index
Chapter 11 - Some combinatorial applications
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Notation
- Chapter 1 Basic concepts
- Chapter 2 Introduction to bipartite graphs
- Chapter 3 Metric properties
- Chapter 4 Connectivity
- Chapter 5 Maximum matchings
- Chapter 6 Expanding properties
- Chapter 7 Subgraphs with restricted degrees
- Chapter 8 Edge colourings
- Chapter 9 Doubly stochastic matrices and bipartite graphs
- Chapter 10 Coverings
- Chapter 11 Some combinatorial applications
- Chapter 12 Bipartite subgraphs of arbitrary graphs
- Appendix
- References
- Index
Summary
Systems of distinct representatives
Let F = (S1, …, Sn) be a family of subsets of a finite set S. A sequence F = (f1, …, fn) of elements of S is called a system of representatives of F if fi ∈ Si, for i = 1,2, …, n. If the elements of F are distinct then F is called a system of distinct representatives (SDR) for F.
Example 11.1.1Let S1={u2, u3, u4}, S2={u1, u2, u3} and S3={u3, u4, u5}. Then F = (u2, u1, u3) is an SDR for F = (S1, S2, S3), since u2 ∈ S1, u1 ∈ S2 and u3 ∈ S3.
Many criteria for the existence of systems of representatives, under various restrictions, have been developed (see Mirsky (1971)). Bipartite graphs have proven to be a particularly useful tool in these investigations, since every collection of subsets F can be represented by the bipartite graph G(F) with bipartition (V1, V2) where V1 = {S1, …, Sn}, V2 = S and the vertices Si ∈ V1 and u ∈ V2 are joined by an edge if and only if u ∈ Si. We shall give a few examples of results on SDRs to demonstrate how this representation can be used, which employ a variety of different graph theoretic results. We begin with the principal result in this area, obtained by P. Hall (1935).
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- Bipartite Graphs and their Applications , pp. 192 - 213Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998