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Tutte matrix

In graph theory, the Tutte matrix \(A\) of a graph G = (V,E) is a matrix used to determine the existence of a perfect matching: that is, a set of edges which is incident with each vertex exactly once.

If the set of vertices V has 2n elements then the Tutte matrix is a 2n × 2n matrix A with entries

\[A_{ij} = \begin{cases} x_{ij}\;\;\mbox{if}\;(i,j) \in E \mbox{ and } i<j\\ -x_{ji}\;\;\mbox{if}\;(i,j) \in E \mbox{ and } i>j\\ 0\;\;\;\;\mbox{otherwise} \end{cases}\]

where the xij are indeterminates. The determinant of this skew-symmetric matrix is then a polynomial (in the variables xij, i<j ): this coincides with the square of the pfaffian of the matrix A and is non-zero (as a polynomial) if and only if a perfect matching exists. (It should be noted that this is not the Tutte polynomial of G.)

The Tutte matrix is a generalisation of the Edmonds matrix for a balanced bipartite graph.

References


Weierstrass preparation theorem

In algebra, the Weierstrass preparation theorem describes a canonical form for formal power series over a complete local ring.

Let O be a complete local ring and f a formal power series in O''X''. Then f can be written uniquely in the form

\[f = (X^n + b_{n-1}X^{n-1} + \cdots + b_0) u(x) , \,\]

where the bi are in the maximal ideal m of O and u is a unit of O''X''.

The integer n defined by the theorem is the Weierstrass degree of f.

References


Zipf distribution

In probability theory and statistics, the Zipf distribution and zeta distribution refer to a class of discrete probability distributions. They have been used to model the distribution of words in words in a text , of text strings and keys in databases, and of the sizes of businesses and towns.

The Zipf distribution with parameter n assigns probability proportional to 1/r to an integer rn and zero otherwise, with normalization factor Hn, the n-th harmonic number.

A Zipf-like distribution with parameters n and s assigns probability proportional to 1/rs to an integer rn and zero otherwise, with normalization factor \(\sum_{r=1}^n 1/r^s\).

The zeta distribution with parameter s assigns probability proportional to 1/rs to all integers r with normalization factor given by the Riemann zeta function 1/ζ(s).

References

How to Cite This Entry:
Richard Pinch/sandbox-CZ. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Richard_Pinch/sandbox-CZ&oldid=30417