The First Order Definability of Graphs: Upper Bounds for Quantifier Rank
classification
🧮 math.CO
math.LO
keywords
orderdistinguishesfirstformulagraphgraphsnon-isomorphicquantifier
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We say that a first order formula A distinguishes a graph G from another graph G' if A is true on G and false on G'. Provided G and G' are non-isomorphic, let D(G,G') denote the minimal quantifier rank of a such formula. We prove that, if G and G' have the same order n, then D(G,G')\le(n+3)/2, which is tight up to an additive constant of 1. The analogous questions are considered for directed graphs (more generally, for arbitrary structures with maximum relation arity 2) and for k-uniform hypergraphs. Also, we study defining formulas, where we require that A distinguishes G from any other non-isomorphic G'.
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