Dulmage–Mendelsohn decomposition

In graph theory, the Dulmage–Mendelsohn decomposition is a partition of the vertices of a bipartite graph into subsets, with the property that two adjacent vertices belong to the same subset if and only if they are paired with each other in a perfect matching of the graph. It is named after A. L. Dulmage and Nathan Mendelsohn, who published it in 1958. A generalization to any graph is the Edmonds-Gallai decomposition, using the Blossom algorithm.

The coarse decomposition

Let G = (U,V,E) be a bipartite graph, and let D be the set of vertices in G that are not matched in at least one maximum matching of G. Then D is necessarily an independent set, so G can be partitioned into three parts:

  • The vertices in DU and their neighbors
  • The vertices in DV and their neighbors
  • The remaining vertices

Every maximum matching in G consists of matchings in the first and second part that match all neighbors of D, together with a perfect matching of the remaining vertices.

The fine decomposition

The third set of vertices in the coarse decomposition (or all vertices in a graph with a perfect matching) may additionally be partitioned into subsets by the following steps:

  • Find a perfect matching of G.
  • Form a directed graph H whose vertices are the matched edges in G. For each unmatched edge (u,v) in G, add a directed edge in H from the matched edge of u to the matched edge of v.
  • Find the strongly connected components of the resulting graph.
  • For each component of H, form a subset of the Dulmage–Mendelsohn decomposition consisting of the vertices in G that are endpoints of edges in the component.

To see that this subdivision into subsets characterizes the edges that belong to perfect matchings, suppose that two vertices u and v in G belong to the same subset of the decomposition, but are not already matched by the initial perfect matching. Then there exists a strongly connected component in H containing edge uv. This edge must belong to a simple cycle in H (by the definition of strong connectivity) which necessarily corresponds to an alternating cycle in G (a cycle whose edges alternate between matched and unmatched edges). This alternating cycle may be used to modify the initial perfect matching to produce a new matching containing edge uv.

An edge uv of the graph G belongs to all perfect matchings of G, if and only if u and v are the only members of their set in the decomposition. Such an edge exists if and only if the matching preclusion number of the graph is one.

Core

As another component of the Dulmage–Mendelsohn decomposition, Dulmage and Mendelsohn defined the core of a graph to be the union of its maximum matchings.[1] However, this concept should be distinguished from the core in the sense of graph homomorphisms, and from the k-core formed by the removal of low-degree vertices.

Applications

This decomposition has been used to partition meshes in finite element analysis, and to determine specified, underspecified and overspecified equations in systems of nonlinear equations.

References

  1. Harary, Frank; Plummer, Michael D. (1967), "On the core of a graph", Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, Third Series, 17: 305–314, doi:10.1112/plms/s3-17.2.305, MR 0209184 .
  • Dulmage, A. L. & Mendelsohn, N. S. (1958). "Coverings of bipartite graphs". Can. J. Math. 10: 517–534. doi:10.4153/cjm-1958-052-0. The original Dulmage–Mendelsohn paper
  • A good explanation of its application to systems of nonlinear equations is available in this paper:
  • An open source implementation of the algorithm is available as a part of the sparse-matrix library: SPOOLES
  • Graph-theoretical aspects of constraint solving in the SST project:
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