Describing hereditary properties by forbidden circular orderings (2112.00154v1)
Abstract: Each hereditary property can be characterized by its set of minimal obstructions; these sets are often unknown, or known but infinite. By allowing extra structure it is sometimes possible to describe such properties by a finite set of forbidden objects. This has been studied most intensely when the extra structure is a linear ordering of the vertex set. For instance, it is known that a graph G is $k$-colourable if and only if $V(G)$ admits a linear ordering $\le$ with no vertices $v_1 \le \cdots \le v_{k+1}$ such that $v_i v_{i+1} \in E(G)$ for every $i \in { 1, \dots, k }$. In this paper, we study such characterizations when the extra structure is a circular ordering of the vertex set. We show that the classes that can be described by finitely many forbidden circularly ordered graphs include forests, circular-arc graphs, and graphs with circular chromatic number less than $k$. In fact, every description by finitely many forbidden circularly ordered graphs can be translated to a description by finitely many forbidden linearly ordered graphs. Nevertheless, our observations underscore the fact that in many cases the circular order descriptions are nicer and more natural.