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Let CMSO denote the counting monadic second order logic of graphs. We give a constructive proof that for some computable function $f$, there is an algorithm $mathfrak{A}$ that takes as input a CMSO sentence $varphi$, a positive integer $t$, and a connected graph $G$ of maximum degree at most $Delta$, and determines, in time $f(|varphi|,t)cdot 2^{O(Delta cdot t)}cdot |G|^{O(t)}$, whether $G$ has a supergraph $G$ of treewidth at most $t$ such that $Gmodels varphi$. The algorithmic metatheorem described above sheds new light on certain unresolved questions within the framework of graph completion algorithms. In particular, using this metatheorem, we provide an explicit algorithm that determines, in time $f(d)cdot 2^{O(Delta cdot d)}cdot |G|^{O(d)}$, whether a connected graph of maximum degree $Delta$ has a planar supergraph of diameter at most $d$. Additionally, we show that for each fixed $k$, the problem of determining whether $G$ has an $k$-outerplanar supergraph of diameter at most $d$ is strongly uniformly fixed parameter tractable with respect to the parameter $d$. This result can be generalized in two directions. First, the diameter parameter can be replaced by any contraction-closed effectively CMSO-definable parameter $mathbf{p}$. Examples of such parameters are vertex-cover number, dominating number, and many other contraction-bidimensional parameters. In the second direction, the planarity requirement can be relaxed to bounded genus, and more generally, to bounded local treewidth.
We introduce the notion of z-topological orderings for digraphs. We prove that given a digraph G on n vertices admitting a z-topological order- ing, together with such an ordering, one may count the number of subgraphs of G that at the same time sati
We construct Feynman rules and Supergraphs in SIM(2) superspace. To test our methods we perform a one-loop calculation of the effective action of the SIM(2) supersymmetric Wess-Zumino model including a term which explicitly breaks Lorentz invariance.
Stochastic models such as Continuous-Time Markov Chains (CTMC) and Stochastic Hybrid Automata (SHA) are powerful formalisms to model and to reason about the dynamics of biological systems, due to their ability to capture the stochasticity inherent in
Given a Counting Monadic Second Order (CMSO) sentence $psi$, the CMSO$[psi]$ problem is defined as follows. The input to CMSO$[psi]$ is a graph $G$, and the objective is to determine whether $Gmodels psi$. Our main theorem states that for every CMSO
Let $mathbb{F}_{q}$ be the finite field of $q$ elements and let $D_{2n}=langle x,ymid x^n=1, y^2=1, yxy=x^{n-1}rangle$ be the dihedral group of order $n$. Left ideals of the group algebra $mathbb{F}_{q}[D_{2n}]$ are known as left dihedral codes over