Abstract

For $k \ge 2$, let $H$ be a $k$-uniform hypergraph on $n$ vertices and $m$ edges. Let $S$ be a set of vertices in a hypergraph $H$. The set $S$ is a transversal if $S$ intersects every edge of $H$, while the set $S$ is strongly independent if no two vertices in $S$ belong to a common edge. The transversal number, $\tau(H)$, of $H$ is the minimum cardinality of a transversal in $H$, and the strong independence number of $H$, $\alpha(H)$, is the maximum cardinality of a strongly independent set in $H$. The hypergraph $H$ is linear if every two distinct edges of $H$ intersect in at most one vertex. Let $\mathcal{H}_k$ be the class of all connected, linear, $k$-uniform hypergraphs with maximum degree $2$. It is known [European J. Combin. 36 (2014), 231–236] that if $H \in \mathcal{H}_k$, then $(k+1)\tau(H) \le n+m$, and there are only two hypergraphs that achieve equality in the bound. In this paper, we prove a much more powerful result, and establish tight upper bounds on $\tau(H)$ and tight lower bounds on $\alpha(H)$ that are achieved for infinite families of hypergraphs. More precisely, if $k \ge 3$ is odd and $H \in \mathcal{H}_k$ has $n$ vertices and $m$ edges, then we prove that $k(k^2 - 3)\tau(H) \le (k-2)(k+1)n + (k - 1)^2m + k-1$ and $k(k^2 - 3)\alpha(H) \ge (k^2 + k - 4)n - (k-1)^2 m - (k-1)$. Similar bounds are proven in the case when $k \ge 2$ is even.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWe study transversals and independence in hypergraphs. Hypergraphs are systems of sets which are conceived as natural extensions of graphs

  • In this paper, we study transversals and independence in hypergraphs

  • We denote the number of components of a hypergraph H by c(H)

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Summary

Introduction

We study transversals and independence in hypergraphs. Hypergraphs are systems of sets which are conceived as natural extensions of graphs. A subset T of vertices in a hypergraph H is a transversal ( called vertex cover or hitting set in many papers) if T intersects every edge of H. The independence number is one of the most fundamental and well-studied graph and hypergraph parameters (see, for example, [1, 2, 4, 9, 11, 10, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 25, 27]). Let the edges of G become vertices in HG and the vertices of G become hyperedges in HG, containing all edges that are incident with that vertex in the graph.

Known Matching Results
Three Families of Hypergraphs
The Family Hk
Main Results
Transversal Number
Strong Independence Number
Summary
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