Cycle rank


In graph theory, the cycle rank of a directed graph is a digraph connectivity measure proposed first by Eggan and Büchi. Intuitively, this concept measures how close a
digraph is to a directed acyclic graph, in the sense that a DAG has
cycle rank zero, while a complete digraph of order n with a self-loop at
each vertex has cycle rank n. The cycle rank of a directed graph is closely related to the tree-depth of an undirected graph and to the star height of a regular language. It has also found use
in sparse matrix computations and logic

Definition

The cycle rank r of a digraph is inductively defined as follows:
The tree-depth of an undirected graph has a very similar definition, using undirected connectivity and connected components in place of strong connectivity and strongly connected components.

History

Cycle rank was introduced by in the context of star height of regular languages. It was rediscovered by as a generalization of undirected tree-depth, which had been developed beginning in the 1980s
and applied to sparse matrix computations.

Examples

The cycle rank of a directed acyclic graph is 0, while a complete digraph of order n with a self-loop at
each vertex has cycle rank n. Apart from these, the cycle rank of a few other digraphs is known: the undirected path of order n, which possesses a symmetric edge relation and no self-loops, has cycle rank . For the directed -torus, i.e., the cartesian product of two directed circuits of lengths m and n, we have
and for m ≠ n.

Computing the cycle rank

Computing the cycle rank is computationally hard: proves that the corresponding decision problem is NP-complete, even for sparse digraphs of maximum outdegree at most 2. On the positive side, the problem is solvable in time on digraphs of maximum outdegree at most 2, and in time on general digraphs. There is an approximation algorithm with approximation ratio.

Applications

Star height of regular languages

The first application of cycle rank was in formal language theory, for studying the star height of regular languages. established a relation between the theories of regular expressions, finite automata, and of directed graphs. In subsequent years, this relation became known as Eggan's theorem, cf..
In automata theory, a nondeterministic finite automaton with ε-moves is defined as a 5-tuple,, consisting of
A word w ∈ Σ* is accepted by the ε-NFA if there exists a directed path from the initial state q0 to some final state in F using edges from δ, such that the concatenation of all labels visited along the path yields the word w. The set of all words over Σ* accepted by the automaton is the language accepted by the automaton A.
When speaking of digraph properties of a nondeterministic finite automaton A with state set Q, we naturally address the digraph with vertex set Q induced by its transition relation. Now the theorem is stated as follows.
Proofs of this theorem are given by, and more recently by.

Cholesky factorization in sparse matrix computations

Another application of this concept lies in sparse matrix computations, namely for using nested dissection to compute the Cholesky factorization of a matrix in parallel. A given sparse -matrix M may be interpreted as the adjacency matrix of some symmetric digraph G on n vertices, in a way such that the non-zero entries of the matrix are in one-to-one correspondence with the edges of G. If the cycle rank of the digraph G is at most k, then the Cholesky factorization of M can be computed in at most k steps on a parallel computer with processors.