Let be an -separator, that is, a vertex subset that separates two nonadjacent vertices and . Then is a
minimal -
separator if no proper subset of separates and . More generally, is called a
minimal separator if it is a minimal separator for some pair of nonadjacent vertices. Notice that this is different from
minimal separating set which says that no proper subset of is a minimal -separator for any pair of vertices . The following is a well-known result characterizing the minimal separators:
Lemma. A vertex separator in is minimal if and only if the graph , obtained by removing from , has two connected components and such that each vertex in is both adjacent to some vertex in and to some vertex in . The minimal -separators also form an
algebraic structure: For two fixed vertices and of a given graph , an -separator can be regarded as a
predecessor of another -separator , if every path from to meets before it meets . More rigorously, the predecessor relation is defined as follows: Let and be two -separators in . Then is a predecessor of , in symbols S \sqsubseteq_{a,b}^G T, if for each , every path connecting to meets . It follows from the definition that the predecessor relation yields a
preorder on the set of all -separators. Furthermore, proved that the predecessor relation gives rise to a
complete lattice when restricted to the set of
minimal -separators in . ==See also==