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Apex graph

In graph theory, a branch of mathematics, an apex graph is a graph that can be made planar by the removal of a single vertex. The deleted vertex is called an apex of the graph. It is an apex, not the apex because an apex graph may have more than one apex; for example, in the minimal nonplanar graphs K5 or K3,3, every vertex is an apex. The apex graphs include graphs that are themselves planar, in which case again every vertex is an apex. The null graph is also counted as an apex graph even though it has no vertex to remove.

An apex graph. The subgraph formed by removing the red vertex is planar.

Apex graphs are closed under the operation of taking minors and play a role in several other aspects of graph minor theory: linkless embedding,[1] Hadwiger's conjecture,[2] YΔY-reducible graphs,[3] and relations between treewidth and graph diameter.[4]

Characterization and recognition

Apex graphs are closed under the operation of taking minors: contracting any edge, or removing any edge or vertex, leads to another apex graph. For, if G is an apex graph with apex v, then any contraction or removal that does not involve v preserves the planarity of the remaining graph, as does any edge removal of an edge incident to v. If an edge incident to v is contracted, the effect on the remaining graph is equivalent to the removal of the other endpoint of the edge. And if v itself is removed, any other vertex may be chosen as the apex.[5]

By the Robertson–Seymour theorem, because they form a minor-closed family of graphs, the apex graphs have a forbidden graph characterization. There are only finitely many graphs that are neither apex graphs nor have another non-apex graph as a minor. These graphs are forbidden minors for the property of being an apex graph. Any other graph G is an apex graph if and only if none of the forbidden minors is a minor of G. These forbidden minors include the seven graphs of the Petersen family, three disconnected graphs formed from the disjoint unions of two of K5 and K3,3, and many other graphs. However, a complete description of them remains unknown.[5][6]

Despite the complete set of forbidden minors remaining unknown, it is possible to test whether a given graph is an apex graph, and if so, to find an apex for the graph, in linear time. More generally, for any fixed constant k, it is possible to recognize in linear time the k-apex graphs, the graphs in which the removal of some carefully chosen set of at most k vertices leads to a planar graph.[7] If k is variable, however, the problem is NP-complete.[8]

Chromatic number

Every apex graph has chromatic number at most five: the underlying planar graph requires at most four colors by the four color theorem, and the remaining vertex needs at most one additional color. Robertson, Seymour & Thomas (1993a) used this fact in their proof of the case k = 6 of the Hadwiger conjecture, the statement that every 6-chromatic graph has the complete graph K6 as a minor: they showed that any minimal counterexample to the conjecture would have to be an apex graph, but since there are no 6-chromatic apex graphs such a counterexample cannot exist.

Unsolved problem in mathematics:

Is every 6-vertex-connected K6-minor-free graph an apex graph?

Jørgensen (1994) conjectured that every 6-vertex-connected graph that does not have K6 as a minor must be an apex graph. If this were proved, the Robertson–Seymour–Thomas result on the Hadwiger conjecture would be an immediate consequence.[2] Jørgensen's conjecture remains unproven.[9] However, if false, it has only finitely many counterexamples.[10]

Local treewidth

A graph family F has bounded local treewidth if the graphs in F obey a functional relationship between diameter and treewidth: there exists a function f such that the treewidth of a diameter-d graph in F is at most f (d). The apex graphs do not have bounded local treewidth: the apex graphs formed by connecting an apex vertex to every vertex of an n × n grid graph have treewidth n and diameter 2, so the treewidth is not bounded by a function of diameter for these graphs. However, apex graphs are intimately connected to bounded local treewidth: the minor-closed graph families F that have bounded local treewidth are exactly the families that have an apex graph as one of their forbidden minors.[4] A minor-closed family of graphs that has an apex graph as one of its forbidden minors is known as apex-minor-free. With this terminology, the connection between apex graphs and local treewidth can be restated as the fact that apex-minor-free graph families are the same as minor-closed graph families with bounded local treewidth.

The concept of bounded local treewidth forms the basis of the theory of bidimensionality, and allows for many algorithmic problems on apex-minor-free graphs to be solved exactly by a polynomial-time algorithm or a fixed-parameter tractable algorithm, or approximated using a polynomial-time approximation scheme.[11] Apex-minor-free graph families obey a strengthened version of the graph structure theorem, leading to additional approximation algorithms for graph coloring and the travelling salesman problem.[12] However, some of these results can also be extended to arbitrary minor-closed graph families via structure theorems relating them to apex-minor-free graphs.[13]

Embeddings

If G is an apex graph with apex v, and τ is the minimum number of faces needed to cover all the neighbors of v in a planar embedding of G \ {v}, then G may be embedded onto a two-dimensional surface of genus τ – 1: simply add that number of bridges to the planar embedding, connecting together all the faces into which v must be connected. For instance, adding a single vertex to an outerplanar graph (a graph with τ = 1) produces a planar graph. When G \ {v} is 3-connected, his bound is within a constant factor of optimal: every surface embedding of G requires genus at least τ/160. However, it is NP-hard to determine the optimal genus of a surface embedding of an apex graph.[14]

By using SPQR trees to encode the possible embeddings of the planar part of an apex graph, it is possible to compute a drawing of the graph in the plane in which the only crossings involve the apex vertex, minimizing the total number of crossings, in polynomial time.[15] However, if arbitrary crossings are allowed, it becomes NP-hard to minimize the number of crossings, even in the special case of apex graphs formed by adding a single edge to a planar graph.[16]

Apex graphs are also linklessly embeddable in three-dimensional space: they can be embedded in such a way that each cycle in the graph is the boundary of a disk that is not crossed by any other feature of the graph.[17] A drawing of this type may be obtained by drawing the planar part of the graph in a plane, placing the apex above the plane, and connecting the apex by straight-line edges to each of its neighbors. Linklessly embeddable graphs form a minor-closed family with the seven graphs in the Petersen family as their minimal forbidden minors;[1] therefore, these graphs are also forbidden as minors for the apex graphs. However, there exist linklessly embeddable graphs that are not apex graphs.

YΔY-reducibility

 
Robertson's example of a non-YΔY-reducible apex graph.

A connected graph is YΔY-reducible if it can be reduced to a single vertex by a sequence of steps, each of which is a Δ-Y or Y-Δ transform, the removal of a self-loop or multiple adjacency, the removal of a vertex with one neighbor, and the replacement of a vertex of degree two and its two neighboring edges by a single edge.[3]

Like the apex graphs and the linkless embeddable graphs, the YΔY-reducible graphs are closed under graph minors. And, like the linkless embeddable graphs, the YΔY-reducible graphs have the seven graphs in the Petersen family as forbidden minors, prompting the question of whether these are the only forbidden minors and whether the YΔY-reducible graphs are the same as the linkless embeddable graphs. However, Neil Robertson provided an example of an apex graph that is not YΔY-reducible. Since every apex graph is linkless embeddable, this shows that there are graphs that are linkless embeddable but not YΔY-reducible and therefore that there are additional forbidden minors for the YΔY-reducible graphs.[3]

Robertson's apex graph is shown in the figure. It can be obtained by connecting an apex vertex to each of the degree-three vertices of a rhombic dodecahedron, or by merging two diametrally opposed vertices of a four-dimensional hypercube graph. Because the rhombic dodecahedron's graph is planar, Robertson's graph is an apex graph. It is a triangle-free graph with minimum degree four, so it cannot be changed by any YΔY-reduction.[3]

Nearly planar graphs

 
The 16-vertex Möbius ladder, an example of a nearly planar graph.

If a graph is an apex graph, it is not necessarily the case that it has a unique apex. For instance, in the minor-minimal nonplanar graphs K5 and K3,3, any of the vertices can be chosen as the apex. Wagner (1967, 1970) defined a nearly planar graph to be a nonplanar apex graph with the property that all vertices can be the apex of the graph; thus, K5 and K3,3 are nearly planar. He provided a classification of these graphs into four subsets, one of which consists of the graphs that (like the Möbius ladders) can be embedded onto the Möbius strip in such a way that the single edge of the strip coincides with a Hamiltonian cycle of the graph. Prior to the proof of the four color theorem, he proved that every nearly planar graph can be colored with at most four colors, except for the graphs formed from a wheel graph with an odd outer cycle by replacing the hub vertex with two adjacent vertices, which require five colors. Additionally, he proved that, with a single exception (the eight-vertex complement graph of the cube) every nearly planar graph has an embedding onto the projective plane.

However, the phrase "nearly planar graph" is highly ambiguous: it has also been used to refer to apex graphs,[18] graphs formed by adding one edge to a planar graph,[19] and graphs formed from a planar embedded graph by replacing a bounded number of faces by "vortexes" of bounded pathwidth,[20] as well as for other less precisely-defined sets of graphs.

Related graph classes

An abstract graph is said to be n-apex if it can be made planar by deleting n or fewer vertices. A 1-apex graph is also said to be apex.

According to Lipton et al. (2018), a graph is edge-apex if there is some edge in the graph that can be deleted to make the graph planar. A graph is contraction-apex if there is some edge in the graph that can be contracted to make the graph planar.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Robertson, Seymour & Thomas (1993b).
  2. ^ a b Robertson, Seymour & Thomas (1993a).
  3. ^ a b c d Truemper (1992).
  4. ^ a b Eppstein (2000); Demaine & Hajiaghayi (2004).
  5. ^ a b Gupta & Impagliazzo (1991).
  6. ^ Pierce (2014).
  7. ^ Kawarabayashi (2009).
  8. ^ Lewis & Yannakakis (1980).
  9. ^ "Jorgensen's Conjecture", Open Problem Garden, retrieved 2016-11-13.
  10. ^ Kawarabayashi et al. (2012).
  11. ^ Eppstein (2000); Frick & Grohe (2001); Demaine & Hajiaghayi (2005).
  12. ^ Demaine, Hajiaghayi & Kawarabayashi (2009).
  13. ^ Grohe (2003).
  14. ^ Mohar (2001).
  15. ^ Chimani et al. (2009).
  16. ^ Cabello & Mohar (2010).
  17. ^ Robertson, Seymour & Thomas (1993c).
  18. ^ Robertson, Seymour & Thomas (1993c); Eppstein (2000).
  19. ^ Archdeacon & Bonnington (2004).
  20. ^ Abraham & Gavoille (2006).

References

apex, graph, graph, theory, branch, mathematics, apex, graph, graph, that, made, planar, removal, single, vertex, deleted, vertex, called, apex, graph, apex, apex, because, apex, graph, have, more, than, apex, example, minimal, nonplanar, graphs, every, vertex. In graph theory a branch of mathematics an apex graph is a graph that can be made planar by the removal of a single vertex The deleted vertex is called an apex of the graph It is an apex not the apex because an apex graph may have more than one apex for example in the minimal nonplanar graphs K5 or K3 3 every vertex is an apex The apex graphs include graphs that are themselves planar in which case again every vertex is an apex The null graph is also counted as an apex graph even though it has no vertex to remove An apex graph The subgraph formed by removing the red vertex is planar Apex graphs are closed under the operation of taking minors and play a role in several other aspects of graph minor theory linkless embedding 1 Hadwiger s conjecture 2 YDY reducible graphs 3 and relations between treewidth and graph diameter 4 Contents 1 Characterization and recognition 2 Chromatic number 3 Local treewidth 4 Embeddings 5 YDY reducibility 6 Nearly planar graphs 7 Related graph classes 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesCharacterization and recognition EditApex graphs are closed under the operation of taking minors contracting any edge or removing any edge or vertex leads to another apex graph For if G is an apex graph with apex v then any contraction or removal that does not involve v preserves the planarity of the remaining graph as does any edge removal of an edge incident to v If an edge incident to v is contracted the effect on the remaining graph is equivalent to the removal of the other endpoint of the edge And if v itself is removed any other vertex may be chosen as the apex 5 By the Robertson Seymour theorem because they form a minor closed family of graphs the apex graphs have a forbidden graph characterization There are only finitely many graphs that are neither apex graphs nor have another non apex graph as a minor These graphs are forbidden minors for the property of being an apex graph Any other graph G is an apex graph if and only if none of the forbidden minors is a minor of G These forbidden minors include the seven graphs of the Petersen family three disconnected graphs formed from the disjoint unions of two of K5 and K3 3 and many other graphs However a complete description of them remains unknown 5 6 Despite the complete set of forbidden minors remaining unknown it is possible to test whether a given graph is an apex graph and if so to find an apex for the graph in linear time More generally for any fixed constant k it is possible to recognize in linear time the k apex graphs the graphs in which the removal of some carefully chosen set of at most k vertices leads to a planar graph 7 If k is variable however the problem is NP complete 8 Chromatic number EditEvery apex graph has chromatic number at most five the underlying planar graph requires at most four colors by the four color theorem and the remaining vertex needs at most one additional color Robertson Seymour amp Thomas 1993a used this fact in their proof of the case k 6 of the Hadwiger conjecture the statement that every 6 chromatic graph has the complete graph K6 as a minor they showed that any minimal counterexample to the conjecture would have to be an apex graph but since there are no 6 chromatic apex graphs such a counterexample cannot exist Unsolved problem in mathematics Is every 6 vertex connected K6 minor free graph an apex graph more unsolved problems in mathematics Jorgensen 1994 conjectured that every 6 vertex connected graph that does not have K6 as a minor must be an apex graph If this were proved the Robertson Seymour Thomas result on the Hadwiger conjecture would be an immediate consequence 2 Jorgensen s conjecture remains unproven 9 However if false it has only finitely many counterexamples 10 Local treewidth EditA graph family F has bounded local treewidth if the graphs in F obey a functional relationship between diameter and treewidth there exists a function f such that the treewidth of a diameter d graph in F is at most f d The apex graphs do not have bounded local treewidth the apex graphs formed by connecting an apex vertex to every vertex of an n n grid graph have treewidth n and diameter 2 so the treewidth is not bounded by a function of diameter for these graphs However apex graphs are intimately connected to bounded local treewidth the minor closed graph families F that have bounded local treewidth are exactly the families that have an apex graph as one of their forbidden minors 4 A minor closed family of graphs that has an apex graph as one of its forbidden minors is known as apex minor free With this terminology the connection between apex graphs and local treewidth can be restated as the fact that apex minor free graph families are the same as minor closed graph families with bounded local treewidth The concept of bounded local treewidth forms the basis of the theory of bidimensionality and allows for many algorithmic problems on apex minor free graphs to be solved exactly by a polynomial time algorithm or a fixed parameter tractable algorithm or approximated using a polynomial time approximation scheme 11 Apex minor free graph families obey a strengthened version of the graph structure theorem leading to additional approximation algorithms for graph coloring and the travelling salesman problem 12 However some of these results can also be extended to arbitrary minor closed graph families via structure theorems relating them to apex minor free graphs 13 Embeddings EditIf G is an apex graph with apex v and t is the minimum number of faces needed to cover all the neighbors of v in a planar embedding of G v then G may be embedded onto a two dimensional surface of genus t 1 simply add that number of bridges to the planar embedding connecting together all the faces into which v must be connected For instance adding a single vertex to an outerplanar graph a graph with t 1 produces a planar graph When G v is 3 connected his bound is within a constant factor of optimal every surface embedding of G requires genus at least t 160 However it is NP hard to determine the optimal genus of a surface embedding of an apex graph 14 By using SPQR trees to encode the possible embeddings of the planar part of an apex graph it is possible to compute a drawing of the graph in the plane in which the only crossings involve the apex vertex minimizing the total number of crossings in polynomial time 15 However if arbitrary crossings are allowed it becomes NP hard to minimize the number of crossings even in the special case of apex graphs formed by adding a single edge to a planar graph 16 Apex graphs are also linklessly embeddable in three dimensional space they can be embedded in such a way that each cycle in the graph is the boundary of a disk that is not crossed by any other feature of the graph 17 A drawing of this type may be obtained by drawing the planar part of the graph in a plane placing the apex above the plane and connecting the apex by straight line edges to each of its neighbors Linklessly embeddable graphs form a minor closed family with the seven graphs in the Petersen family as their minimal forbidden minors 1 therefore these graphs are also forbidden as minors for the apex graphs However there exist linklessly embeddable graphs that are not apex graphs YDY reducibility Edit Robertson s example of a non YDY reducible apex graph A connected graph is YDY reducible if it can be reduced to a single vertex by a sequence of steps each of which is a D Y or Y D transform the removal of a self loop or multiple adjacency the removal of a vertex with one neighbor and the replacement of a vertex of degree two and its two neighboring edges by a single edge 3 Like the apex graphs and the linkless embeddable graphs the YDY reducible graphs are closed under graph minors And like the linkless embeddable graphs the YDY reducible graphs have the seven graphs in the Petersen family as forbidden minors prompting the question of whether these are the only forbidden minors and whether the YDY reducible graphs are the same as the linkless embeddable graphs However Neil Robertson provided an example of an apex graph that is not YDY reducible Since every apex graph is linkless embeddable this shows that there are graphs that are linkless embeddable but not YDY reducible and therefore that there are additional forbidden minors for the YDY reducible graphs 3 Robertson s apex graph is shown in the figure It can be obtained by connecting an apex vertex to each of the degree three vertices of a rhombic dodecahedron or by merging two diametrally opposed vertices of a four dimensional hypercube graph Because the rhombic dodecahedron s graph is planar Robertson s graph is an apex graph It is a triangle free graph with minimum degree four so it cannot be changed by any YDY reduction 3 Nearly planar graphs Edit The 16 vertex Mobius ladder an example of a nearly planar graph If a graph is an apex graph it is not necessarily the case that it has a unique apex For instance in the minor minimal nonplanar graphs K5 and K3 3 any of the vertices can be chosen as the apex Wagner 1967 1970 defined a nearly planar graph to be a nonplanar apex graph with the property that all vertices can be the apex of the graph thus K5 and K3 3 are nearly planar He provided a classification of these graphs into four subsets one of which consists of the graphs that like the Mobius ladders can be embedded onto the Mobius strip in such a way that the single edge of the strip coincides with a Hamiltonian cycle of the graph Prior to the proof of the four color theorem he proved that every nearly planar graph can be colored with at most four colors except for the graphs formed from a wheel graph with an odd outer cycle by replacing the hub vertex with two adjacent vertices which require five colors Additionally he proved that with a single exception the eight vertex complement graph of the cube every nearly planar graph has an embedding onto the projective plane However the phrase nearly planar graph is highly ambiguous it has also been used to refer to apex graphs 18 graphs formed by adding one edge to a planar graph 19 and graphs formed from a planar embedded graph by replacing a bounded number of faces by vortexes of bounded pathwidth 20 as well as for other less precisely defined sets of graphs Related graph classes EditAn abstract graph is said to be n apex if it can be made planar by deleting n or fewer vertices A 1 apex graph is also said to be apex According to Lipton et al 2018 a graph is edge apex if there is some edge in the graph that can be deleted to make the graph planar A graph is contraction apex if there is some edge in the graph that can be contracted to make the graph planar See also EditPolyhedral pyramid a 4 dimensional polytope whose vertices and edges form an apex graph with the apex adjacent to every vertex of a polyhedral graphNotes Edit a b Robertson Seymour amp Thomas 1993b a b Robertson Seymour amp Thomas 1993a a b c d Truemper 1992 a b Eppstein 2000 Demaine amp Hajiaghayi 2004 a b Gupta amp Impagliazzo 1991 Pierce 2014 Kawarabayashi 2009 Lewis amp Yannakakis 1980 Jorgensen s Conjecture Open Problem Garden retrieved 2016 11 13 Kawarabayashi et al 2012 Eppstein 2000 Frick amp Grohe 2001 Demaine amp Hajiaghayi 2005 Demaine Hajiaghayi amp Kawarabayashi 2009 Grohe 2003 Mohar 2001 Chimani et al 2009 Cabello amp Mohar 2010 Robertson Seymour amp Thomas 1993c Robertson Seymour amp Thomas 1993c Eppstein 2000 Archdeacon amp Bonnington 2004 Abraham amp Gavoille 2006 References EditAbraham Ittai Gavoille Cyril 2006 Object location using path separators Proc 25th ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing PODC 06 pp 188 197 doi 10 1145 1146381 1146411 Archdeacon Dan Bonnington C P C Paul 2004 Obstructions for embedding cubic graphs on the spindle surface Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series B 91 2 229 252 doi 10 1016 j jctb 2004 02 001 Cabello Sergio Mohar Bojan 2010 Adding one edge to planar graphs makes crossing number hard Proc 26th ACM Symposium on Computational Geometry SoCG 10 PDF pp 68 76 doi 10 1145 1810959 1810972 archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 14 retrieved 2010 08 02 Chimani Markus Gutwenger Carsten Mutzel Petra Wolf Christian 2009 Inserting a vertex into a planar graph Proc 20th ACM SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms SODA 09 pp 375 383 Demaine Erik D Hajiaghayi Mohammad Taghi 2004 Diameter and treewidth in minor closed graph families revisited Algorithmica 40 3 211 215 doi 10 1007 s00453 004 1106 1 Demaine Erik D Hajiaghayi Mohammad Taghi 2005 Bidimensionality new connections between FPT algorithms and PTASs Proc 16th ACM SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms SODA 05 pp 590 601 archived from the original on 2018 12 11 retrieved 2010 08 02 Demaine Erik D Hajiaghayi Mohammad Taghi Kawarabayashi Ken ichi 2009 Approximation algorithms via structural results for apex minor free graphs PDF Proc 36th International Colloquium Automata Languages and Programming ICALP 09 Lecture Notes in Computer Science vol 5555 Springer Verlag pp 316 327 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 02927 1 27 Eppstein David 2000 Diameter and treewidth in minor closed graph families Algorithmica 27 3 275 291 arXiv math CO 9907126 doi 10 1007 s004530010020 Frick Markus Grohe Martin 2001 Deciding first order properties of locally tree decomposable structures Journal of the ACM 48 6 1184 1206 arXiv cs 0004007 doi 10 1145 504794 504798 Grohe Martin 2003 Local tree width excluded minors and approximation algorithms Combinatorica 23 4 613 632 arXiv math CO 0001128 doi 10 1007 s00493 003 0037 9 Gupta A Impagliazzo R 1991 Computing planar intertwines Proc 32nd IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science FOCS 91 IEEE Computer Society pp 802 811 doi 10 1109 SFCS 1991 185452 Jorgensen Leif K 1994 Contractions to K8 Journal of Graph Theory 18 5 431 448 doi 10 1002 jgt 3190180502 As cited by Robertson Seymour and Thomas 1993a 1993c Kawarabayashi Ken ichi 2009 Planarity allowing few error vertices in linear time PDF Proc 50th IEEE Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science FOCS 09 IEEE Computer Society pp 639 648 doi 10 1109 FOCS 2009 45 Kawarabayashi Ken ichi Norine Serguei Thomas Robin Wollan Paul 2012 K 6 displaystyle K 6 minors in large 6 connected graphs arXiv 1203 2192 Bibcode 2012arXiv1203 2192K Lewis John M Yannakakis Mihalis 1980 The node deletion problem for hereditary properties is NP complete Journal of Computer and System Sciences 20 2 219 230 doi 10 1016 0022 0000 80 90060 4 Lipton Max Mackall Eoin Mattman Thomas W Pierce Mike Robinson Samantha Thomas Jeremy Weinschelbaum Ilan 2018 Six variations on a theme Almost planar graphs Involve A Journal of Mathematics 11 3 413 448 arXiv 1608 01973 doi 10 2140 involve 2018 11 413 Mohar Bojan 2001 Face covers and the genus problem for apex graphs PDF Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series B 82 1 102 117 doi 10 1006 jctb 2000 2026 archived from the original PDF on 2017 09 22 retrieved 2010 08 02 Pierce Mike 2014 Searching for and classifying the finite set of minor minimal non apex graphs PDF Honours thesis California State University Chico Robertson Neil Seymour Paul Thomas Robin 1993a Hadwiger s conjecture for K6 free graphs PDF Combinatorica 13 3 279 361 doi 10 1007 BF01202354 Robertson Neil Seymour P D Thomas Robin 1993b Linkless embeddings of graphs in 3 space Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 28 1 84 89 arXiv math 9301216 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 1993 00335 5 MR 1164063 Robertson Neil Seymour Paul Thomas Robin 1993c A survey of linkless embeddings in Robertson Neil Seymour Paul eds Graph Structure Theory Proc AMS IMS SIAM Joint Summer Research Conference on Graph Minors PDF Contemporary Mathematics vol 147 American Mathematical Society pp 125 136 Truemper Klaus 1992 Matroid Decomposition PDF Academic Press pp 100 101 Wagner Klaus 1967 Fastplattbare Graphen Journal of Combinatorial Theory in German 3 4 326 365 doi 10 1016 S0021 9800 67 80103 0 Wagner Klaus 1970 Zum basisproblem der nicht in die projektive ebene einbettbaren graphen I Journal of Combinatorial Theory in German 9 1 27 43 doi 10 1016 S0021 9800 70 80052 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apex graph amp oldid 1097173796, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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