In topological graph theory, the Hanani–Tutte theorem is a result on the parity of edge crossings in a graph drawing. It states that every drawing in the plane of a non-planar graph contains a pair of independent edges (not both sharing an endpoint) that cross each other an odd number of times. Equivalently, it can be phrased as a planarity criterion: a graph is planar if and only if it has a drawing in which every pair of independent edges crosses evenly (or not at all).[1]
For other surfaces S than the plane, a graph can be drawn on S without crossings if and only if it can be drawn in such a way that all pairs of edges cross an even number of times; this is known as the weak Hanani–Tutte theorem for S. The strong Hanani–Tutte theorem states that a graph can be drawn without crossings on S if and only if it can be drawn in such a way that all independent pairs of edges cross an even number of times, without regard for the number of crossings between edges that share an endpoint;[10]
this strong version does not hold for all surfaces,[11] but it is known to hold for
the plane, the projective plane and the torus.[12]
The same approach, in which one shows that pairs of edges with an even number of crossings can be disregarded or eliminated in some type of graph drawing and uses this fact to set up a system of linear equations describing the existence of a drawing, has been applied to several other graph drawing problems, including upward planar drawings,[13] drawings minimizing the number of uncrossed edges,[14][15] and clustered planarity.[16]
References
^ abSchaefer, Marcus (2013), "Toward a theory of planarity: Hanani–Tutte and planarity variants", Journal of Graph Algorithms and Applications, 17 (4): 367–440, doi:10.7155/jgaa.00298 (inactive 2024-07-29), MR3094190{{citation}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of July 2024 (link).
^Levow, Roy B. (1972), "On Tutte's algebraic approach to the theory of crossing numbers", Proceedings of the Third Southeastern Conference on Combinatorics, Graph Theory, and Computing (Florida Atlantic Univ., Boca Raton, Fla., 1972), Florida Atlantic Univ., Boca Raton, Fla., pp. 315–314, MR0354426.
^Wu, Wen Jun (1985), "On the planar imbedding of linear graphs. I", Journal of Systems Science and Mathematical Sciences, 5 (4): 290–302, MR0818118. Continued in 6 (1): 23–35, 1986.
^Pelsmajer, Michael J.; Schaefer, Marcus; Stasi, Despina (2009), "Strong Hanani–Tutte on the projective plane", SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics, 23 (3): 1317–1323, CiteSeerX10.1.1.217.7182, doi:10.1137/08072485X, MR2538654.
^Fulek, Radoslav; Kynčl, Jan (2019), "Counterexample to an extension of the Hanani–Tutte theorem on the surface of genus 4", Combinatorica, 39 (6): 1267–1279, arXiv:1709.00508, doi:10.1007/s00493-019-3905-7
^Fulek, Radoslav; Pelsmajer, Michael J.; Schaefer, Marcus (2021), "Strong Hanani–Tutte for the torus", in Buchin, Kevin; Colin de Verdière, Éric (eds.), 37th International Symposium on Computational Geometry, SoCG 2021, June 7–11, 2021, Buffalo, NY, USA (Virtual Conference), LIPIcs, vol. 189, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, pp. 38:1–38:15, arXiv:2009.01683, doi:10.4230/LIPIcs.SoCG.2021.38
^Fulek, Radoslav; Pelsmajer, Michael J.; Schaefer, Marcus; Štefanković, Daniel (2013), "Hanani–Tutte, monotone drawings, and level-planarity", in Pach, János (ed.), Thirty essays on geometric graph theory, Springer, ISBN978-1-4614-0110-0.
^Gutwenger, C.; Mutzel, P.; Schaefer, M. (2014), "Practical experience with Hanani–Tutte for testing c-planarity", 2014 Proceedings of the Sixteenth Workshop on Algorithm Engineering and Experiments (ALENEX), pp. 86–97, doi:10.1137/1.9781611973198.9, ISBN978-1-61197-319-8.