Indépendance algébriqueEn algèbre, l'indépendance algébrique d'un ensemble de nombres, sur un corps commutatif, décrit le fait que ses éléments ne sont pas racines d'un polynôme en plusieurs indéterminées à coefficients dans ce corps. Soient L un corps commutatif, S un sous-ensemble de L et K un sous-corps de L. On dit que S est algébriquement libre sur K, ou que ses éléments sont algébriquement indépendants sur K si, pour tout suite finie (s, ... , s) d'éléments distincts de S et tout polynôme non nul P(X, ...
Vámos matroidIn mathematics, the Vámos matroid or Vámos cube is a matroid over a set of eight elements that cannot be represented as a matrix over any field. It is named after English mathematician Peter Vámos, who first described it in an unpublished manuscript in 1968. The Vámos matroid has eight elements, which may be thought of as the eight vertices of a cube or cuboid. The matroid has rank 4: all sets of three or fewer elements are independent, and 65 of the 70 possible sets of four elements are also independent.
Matroid representationIn the mathematical theory of matroids, a matroid representation is a family of vectors whose linear independence relation is the same as that of a given matroid. Matroid representations are analogous to group representations; both types of representation provide abstract algebraic structures (matroids and groups respectively) with concrete descriptions in terms of linear algebra. A linear matroid is a matroid that has a representation, and an F-linear matroid (for a field F) is a matroid that has a representation using a vector space over F.
Graphic matroidIn the mathematical theory of matroids, a graphic matroid (also called a cycle matroid or polygon matroid) is a matroid whose independent sets are the forests in a given finite undirected graph. The dual matroids of graphic matroids are called co-graphic matroids or bond matroids. A matroid that is both graphic and co-graphic is sometimes called a planar matroid (but this should not be confused with matroids of rank 3, which generalize planar point configurations); these are exactly the graphic matroids formed from planar graphs.
MatroïdeEn mathématiques, et plus particulièrement en combinatoire, un matroïde est une structure introduite comme un cadre général pour le concept d'indépendance linéaire. Elle est donc naturellement liée à l'algèbre linéaire (déjà au niveau du vocabulaire : indépendant, base, rang), mais aussi à la théorie des graphes (circuit, cycle), à l'algorithmique (algorithme glouton), et à la géométrie (pour diverses questions liées à la représentation). La notion a été introduite en 1935 par Whitney. Le mot matroïde provient du mot matrice.
Circuit rankIn graph theory, a branch of mathematics, the circuit rank, cyclomatic number, cycle rank, or nullity of an undirected graph is the minimum number of edges that must be removed from the graph to break all its cycles, making it into a tree or forest. It is equal to the number of independent cycles in the graph (the size of a cycle basis). Unlike the corresponding feedback arc set problem for directed graphs, the circuit rank r is easily computed using the formula where m is the number of edges in the given graph, n is the number of vertices, and c is the number of connected components.
Component (graph theory)In graph theory, a component of an undirected graph is a connected subgraph that is not part of any larger connected subgraph. The components of any graph partition its vertices into disjoint sets, and are the induced subgraphs of those sets. A graph that is itself connected has exactly one component, consisting of the whole graph. Components are sometimes called connected components. The number of components in a given graph is an important graph invariant, and is closely related to invariants of matroids, topological spaces, and matrices.