Ádám's Conjecture
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
graph theory In mathematics, graph theory is the study of ''graphs'', which are mathematical structures used to model pairwise relations between objects. A graph in this context is made up of '' vertices'' (also called ''nodes'' or ''points'') which are conne ...
, a circulant graph is an undirected graph acted on by a cyclic group of
symmetries Symmetry (from grc, συμμετρία "agreement in dimensions, due proportion, arrangement") in everyday language refers to a sense of harmonious and beautiful proportion and balance. In mathematics, "symmetry" has a more precise definiti ...
which takes any vertex to any other vertex. It is sometimes called a cyclic graph, but this term has other meanings.


Equivalent definitions

Circulant graphs can be described in several equivalent ways:. *The automorphism group of the graph includes a
cyclic Cycle, cycles, or cyclic may refer to: Anthropology and social sciences * Cyclic history, a theory of history * Cyclical theory, a theory of American political history associated with Arthur Schlesinger, Sr. * Social cycle, various cycles in soc ...
subgroup that
acts transitively In mathematics, a group action on a space is a group homomorphism of a given group into the group of transformations of the space. Similarly, a group action on a mathematical structure is a group homomorphism of a group into the automorphism ...
on the graph's vertices. In other words, the graph has a graph automorphism, which is a cyclic permutation of its vertices. *The graph has an
adjacency matrix In graph theory and computer science, an adjacency matrix is a square matrix used to represent a finite graph. The elements of the matrix indicate whether pairs of vertices are adjacent or not in the graph. In the special case of a finite simp ...
that is a circulant matrix. *The vertices of the graph can be numbered from 0 to in such a way that, if some two vertices numbered and are adjacent, then every two vertices numbered and are adjacent. *The graph can be drawn (possibly with crossings) so that its vertices lie on the corners of a regular polygon, and every rotational symmetry of the polygon is also a symmetry of the drawing. *The graph is a Cayley graph of a cyclic group.


Examples

Every cycle graph is a circulant graph, as is every
crown graph In graph theory, a branch of mathematics, a crown graph on vertices is an undirected graph with two sets of vertices and and with an edge from to whenever . The crown graph can be viewed as a complete bipartite graph from which the edges ...
with vertices. The
Paley graph In mathematics, Paley graphs are dense undirected graphs constructed from the members of a suitable finite field by connecting pairs of elements that differ by a quadratic residue. The Paley graphs form an infinite family of conference graphs, whic ...
s of order (where is a
prime number A prime number (or a prime) is a natural number greater than 1 that is not a product of two smaller natural numbers. A natural number greater than 1 that is not prime is called a composite number. For example, 5 is prime because the only ways ...
congruent to ) is a graph in which the vertices are the numbers from 0 to and two vertices are adjacent if their difference is a
quadratic residue In number theory, an integer ''q'' is called a quadratic residue modulo ''n'' if it is congruent to a perfect square modulo ''n''; i.e., if there exists an integer ''x'' such that: :x^2\equiv q \pmod. Otherwise, ''q'' is called a quadratic no ...
modulo . Since the presence or absence of an edge depends only on the difference modulo  of two vertex numbers, any Paley graph is a circulant graph. Every Möbius ladder is a circulant graph, as is every complete graph. A complete bipartite graph is a circulant graph if it has the same number of vertices on both sides of its bipartition. If two numbers and are relatively prime, then the rook's graph (a graph that has a vertex for each square of an chessboard and an edge for each two squares that a chess rook can move between in a single move) is a circulant graph. This is because its symmetries include as a subgroup the cyclic group ''Cmn'' \simeq ''Cm''×''Cn''. More generally, in this case, the tensor product of graphs between any - and -vertex circulants is itself a circulant. Many of the known
lower bound In mathematics, particularly in order theory, an upper bound or majorant of a subset of some preordered set is an element of that is greater than or equal to every element of . Dually, a lower bound or minorant of is defined to be an element ...
s on
Ramsey number In combinatorics, Ramsey's theorem, in one of its graph-theoretic forms, states that one will find monochromatic cliques in any edge labelling (with colours) of a sufficiently large complete graph. To demonstrate the theorem for two colours (say ...
s come from examples of circulant graphs that have small maximum cliques and small maximum independent sets.Small Ramsey Numbers
Stanisław P. Radziszowski, '' Electronic J. Combinatorics'', dynamic survey 1, updated 2014.


A specific example

The circulant graph C_n^ with jumps s_1, \ldots, s_k is defined as the graph with n nodes labeled 0, 1, \ldots, n-1 where each node ''i'' is adjacent to 2''k'' nodes i \pm s_1, \ldots, i \pm s_k \mod n. * The graph C_n^ is connected if and only if \gcd(n, s_1, \ldots, s_k) = 1. * If 1 \leq s_1 < \cdots < s_k are fixed integers then the number of
spanning tree In the mathematical field of graph theory, a spanning tree ''T'' of an undirected graph ''G'' is a subgraph that is a tree which includes all of the vertices of ''G''. In general, a graph may have several spanning trees, but a graph that is not ...
s t(C_n^)=na_n^2 where a_n satisfies a recurrence relation of order 2^. ** In particular, t(C_n^) = nF_n^2 where F_n is the ''n''-th Fibonacci number.


Self-complementary circulants

A self-complementary graph is a graph in which replacing every edge by a non-edge and vice versa produces an
isomorphic In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between them. The word is ...
graph. For instance, a five-vertex cycle graph is self-complementary, and is also a circulant graph. More generally every
Paley graph In mathematics, Paley graphs are dense undirected graphs constructed from the members of a suitable finite field by connecting pairs of elements that differ by a quadratic residue. The Paley graphs form an infinite family of conference graphs, whic ...
of prime order is a self-complementary circulant graph..
Horst Sachs Horst Sachs (27 March 1927 – 25 April 2016) was a German mathematician, an expert in graph theory, a recipient of the Euler Medal (2000). He earned the degree of Doctor of Science (Dr. rer. nat.) from the Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Witt ...
showed that, if a number has the property that every prime factor of is congruent to , then there exists a self-complementary circulant with vertices. He conjectured that this condition is also necessary: that no other values of allow a self-complementary circulant to exist. The conjecture was proven some 40 years later, by Vilfred.


Ádám's conjecture

Define a ''circulant numbering'' of a circulant graph to be a labeling of the vertices of the graph by the numbers from 0 to in such a way that, if some two vertices numbered and are adjacent, then every two vertices numbered and are adjacent. Equivalently, a circulant numbering is a numbering of the vertices for which the adjacency matrix of the graph is a circulant matrix. Let be an integer that is relatively prime to , and let be any integer. Then the linear function that takes a number to transforms a circulant numbering to another circulant numbering. András Ádám conjectured that these linear maps are the only ways of renumbering a circulant graph while preserving the circulant property: that is, if and are isomorphic circulant graphs, with different numberings, then there is a linear map that transforms the numbering for into the numbering for . However, Ádám's conjecture is now known to be false. A counterexample is given by graphs and with 16 vertices each; a vertex in is connected to the six neighbors , , and modulo 16, while in the six neighbors are , , and modulo 16. These two graphs are isomorphic, but their isomorphism cannot be realized by a linear map.
Toida's conjecture In combinatorial mathematics, Toida's conjecture, due to Shunichi Toida in 1977, is a refinement of the disproven Ádám's conjecture from 1967. Statement Both conjectures concern circulant graphs. These are graphs defined from a positive integer ...
refines Ádám's conjecture by considering only a special class of circulant graphs, in which all of the differences between adjacent graph vertices are relatively prime to the number of vertices. According to this refined conjecture, these special circulant graphs should have the property that all of their symmetries come from symmetries of the underlying additive group of numbers modulo . It was proven by two groups in 2001 and 2002.


Algorithmic questions

There is a
polynomial-time In computer science, the time complexity is the computational complexity that describes the amount of computer time it takes to run an algorithm. Time complexity is commonly estimated by counting the number of elementary operations performed by t ...
recognition algorithm for circulant graphs, and the isomorphism problem for circulant graphs can be solved in polynomial time.


References


External links

*{{mathworld, title=Circulant Graph, urlname=CirculantGraph Graph families Regular graphs