Asymptotic structure. V. The coarse Menger conjecture in bounded path-width
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Menger's theorem tells us that if $S,T$ are sets of vertices in a graph $G$, then (for $k\ge0$) either there are $k+1$ vertex-disjoint paths between $S$ and $T$, or there is a set of $k$ vertices separating $S$ and $T$. But what if we want the paths to be far apart, say at distance at least $c$? One might hope that we can find either $k+1$ paths pairwise far apart, or $k$ sets of bounded radius that separate $S$ and $T$, where the bound on the radius is some $\ell$ that depends only on $k,c$ (the ``coarse Menger conjecture''). The last three authors showed in an earlier paper that this is false for all $k\ge 2$ and $c\ge3$, by constructing a sequence of finite graphs giving counterexamples for larger and larger values of $\ell$ with $k=2$ and $c=3$. These counterexamples contained subdivisions of uniform binary trees with arbitrarily large depth as subgraphs, and so had unbounded path-width. Here we show that, if $H$ is a graph that can be drawn in the plane such that each region shares a vertex with the infinite region, then the coarse Menger conjecture is true for all graphs not containing $H$ as a minor. Consequently, the conjecture is true for all graphs with bounded path-width (by taking $H$ to be a sufficiently large tree), and it is true for series-parallel graphs (by taking $H=K_4$). The first is somewhat surprising, since the conjecture is false for bounded tree-width.
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Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
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A coarse Menger's Theorem for planar and bounded genus graphs
In planar and bounded-genus graphs, absence of k pairwise d-far S-T paths implies a vertex set of size f(d,k) whose d-neighborhood intersects every S-T path.
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Coarse Menger property of quasi-minor excluded graphs and length spaces
Locally finite graphs with an excluded finite minor have the weak coarse Menger property with f depending only on k and g linear in r independent of k.
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