Counting edge-injective homomorphisms and matchings on restricted graph classes
Abstract
We consider the \#W[1]-hard problem of counting all matchings with exactly k edges in a given input graph G; we prove that it remains \#W[1]-hard on graphs G that are line graphs or bipartite graphs with degree 2 on one side. In our proofs, we use that k-matchings in line graphs can be equivalently viewed as edge-injective homomorphisms from the disjoint union of k length-2 paths into (arbitrary) host graphs. Here, a homomorphism from H to G is edge-injective if it maps any two distinct edges of H to distinct edges in G. We show that edge-injective homomorphisms from a pattern graph H can be counted in polynomial time if H has bounded vertex-cover number after removing isolated edges. For hereditary classes H of pattern graphs, we complement this result: If the graphs in H have unbounded vertex-cover number even after deleting isolated edges, then counting edge-injective homomorphisms with patterns from H is \#W[1]-hard. Our proofs rely on an edge-colored variant of Holant problems and a delicate interpolation argument; both may be of independent interest.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.