Content deleted Content added
Erel Segal (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 41:
A '''partial transversal''' is a set containing at most one element from each member of the collection, or (in the stricter form of the concept) a set with an injection from the set to ''C''. The transversals of a finite collection ''C'' of finite sets form the basis sets of a [[matroid]], the '''transversal matroid''' of ''C''. The independent sets of the transversal matroid are the partial transversals of ''C''.<ref>{{citation|last=Oxley|first=James G.|title=Matroid Theory|volume=3|page=48|year=2006|series=Oxford graduate texts in mathematics|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-920250-8|authorlink=James Oxley}}.</ref>
An '''independent transversal''' (also called a
Another generalization of the concept of a transversal would be a set that just has a non-empty intersection with each member of ''C''. An example of the latter would be a [[Bernstein set|'''Bernstein set''']], which is defined as a set that has a non-empty intersection with each set of ''C'', but contains no set of ''C'', where ''C'' is the collection of all [[perfect sets]] of a topological [[Polish space]]. As another example, let ''C'' consist of all the lines of a [[projective plane]], then a [[blocking set]] in this plane is a set of points which intersects each line but contains no line.
|