@johncarlosbaez
oh i just accidentally ran into these the number of rooted 2 connected planar graphs with n edges (allowing multiple edges between vertices) runs as G_2=1,2,6,22,91 whereas the schroder numbers run 1,2,6,22,91.
roughly you can build 2-connected planar graphs out of 3-connected planar graphs and the schroder numbers count graphs which are "trivial" in this sense
@johncarlosbaez
(oops schoder numbers run 1,2,6,22,90; typo)
@johncarlosbaez
the first nontrivial graph is the tetrahedron which explains the 90-91 difference
@alexthecamel - ah, the tetrahedron! Nice.
@johncarlosbaez
roughly the idea is to treat vertical lines as vertices and boxes as edges. thing is, this shape you had before gives the tetrahedron with this rule, but there are 2 such shapes.
so to do this in more generality we'd need to think of these as directed graphs and add some more criteria?
@alexthecamel - Cool thought. But the center is square so the outside ones must be too. This forces the outside ones to have side length 1/2 that of the whole square. This forces the central one to have side length 0.
@johncarlosbaez
when all the rectangles are oriented the same way you could also think of these as networks of unit ohm resistors?
@alexthecamel - Yes!!!
I was just thinking about this stuff last night, and I want to post about it.
Note that when all the rectangles are oriented the same way you can rescale one axis to make them all squares. Then this resistor network is called a 'Smith network':
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squaring_the_square