Many important matroid families are self-dual, meaning that a matroid belongs to the family if and only if its dual does. Many other matroid families come in dual pairs. Examples of this phenomenon include: • The
binary matroids (matroids representable over
GF(2)), the matroids representable over any other field, and the
regular matroids, are all self-dual families. • The
gammoids form a self-dual family. The strict gammoids are dual to the
transversal matroids. • The
uniform matroids and
partition matroids are self-dual. The dual to a uniform matroid U{}^r_n is the uniform matroid U{}^{n-r}_n. Within the family of uniform matroids, any matroid where r=n/2 is dual exactly to itself. • The dual of a
graphic matroid is itself graphic if and only if the underlying graph is planar; the matroid of the dual of a planar graph is the same as the dual of the matroid of the graph. Thus, the family of graphic matroids of planar graphs is self-dual. • Among the graphic matroids, and more generally among the binary matroids, the
bipartite matroids (matroids in which every circuit is even) are dual to the
Eulerian matroids (matroids that can be partitioned into disjoint circuits). It is an open problem whether the family of
algebraic matroids is self-dual. If
V is a
vector space and
V* is its
orthogonal complement, then the
linear matroid of
V and the linear matroid of
V* are duals. As a corollary, the dual of any linear matroid is a linear matroid. ==References==