Difference between revisions of "Nearly Complete Graph"

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What follows is a mathematically precise definition of a nearly complete graph.
 
What follows is a mathematically precise definition of a nearly complete graph.
  
Consider a graph ''G'' with vertices ''v'', edges ''e'', and genus ''g''.
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Consider a graph with vertices ''v'', edges ''e'', and genus ''g''.
  
 
Euler's lower bound is defined to be
 
Euler's lower bound is defined to be
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''X'' = (''e'' - 3''v'' + 6)/6 .
 
''X'' = (''e'' - 3''v'' + 6)/6 .
  
If a graph is complete then ''g'' is equal to the lowest integer greater than or equal to ''X''. Consider a number ''p'' such that the removal of any set of ''p'' or fewer edges from a complete graph yields a connected graph with ''g = X''. The maximum value of ''p'' is denoted by ''NC(v)''. It depends only on the vertex number.
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If a graph is complete then ''g'' is equal to the lowest integer greater than or equal to ''X''. Consider a number ''p'' such that the removal of any set of ''p'' or fewer edges from a complete graph yields a connected graph with ''g = X''. The maximum value of ''p'' is denoted by ''NC(v)''.  
  
A graph with vertices ''v'' is nearly complete if it can be constructed by starting with a complete graph with the same number of vertices and removing up to ''NC(v)'' edges.
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A graph with vertices ''v'' is said to be nearly complete if it can be constructed by starting with a complete graph with the same number of vertices and removing up to ''NC(v)'' edges.
  
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
 
* [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01836527 The genus of nearly complete graphs-case 6, Jonathan L. Gross, 1975]
 
* [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01836527 The genus of nearly complete graphs-case 6, Jonathan L. Gross, 1975]

Revision as of 12:16, 31 December 2019

A graph is a collection of vertices and edges. A graph is complete if there is an edge connecting every vertex to every other vertex. A graph is nearly complete if it can be obtained by removing a small number of edges from a complete graph.


What follows is a mathematically precise definition of a nearly complete graph.

Consider a graph with vertices v, edges e, and genus g.

Euler's lower bound is defined to be

X = (e - 3v + 6)/6 .

If a graph is complete then g is equal to the lowest integer greater than or equal to X. Consider a number p such that the removal of any set of p or fewer edges from a complete graph yields a connected graph with g = X. The maximum value of p is denoted by NC(v).

A graph with vertices v is said to be nearly complete if it can be constructed by starting with a complete graph with the same number of vertices and removing up to NC(v) edges.


External Links