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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 bivariegated graph is a graph whose vertex set can be partitioned into two equal parts such that each vertex is adjacent to exactly one vertex from the other set not containing it.... In a bivarigated graph ''G'' with 2''n'' vertices, there exists a set of ''n'' independent edges such that no odd number of them lie on a cycle of ''G''.


Examples

The Petersen graph, shown below, is a bivariegated graph: if one partitions it into an outer pentagon and an inner five-point star, each vertex on one side of the partition has exactly one neighbor on the other side of the partition. More generally, the same is true for any generalized Petersen graph formed by connecting an outer polygon and an inner star with the same number of points; for instance, this applies to the Möbius–Kantor graph and the
Desargues graph In the mathematical field of graph theory, the Desargues graph is a distance-transitive, cubic graph with 20 vertices and 30 edges. It is named after Girard Desargues, arises from several different combinatorial constructions, has a high level ...
. Any hypercube graph, such as the four-dimensional hypercube shown below, is also bivariegated. However, the graph shown below is not bivariegated. Whatever you choose the three independent edges, one of them is an edge of a cycle.


Bivariegated trees

A tree ''T'' with 2''n'' vertices, is bivariegated if and only if the
independence number Independence is a condition of a person, nation, country, or Sovereign state, state in which residents and population, or some portion thereof, exercise self-government, and usually sovereignty, over its territory. The opposite of independ ...
of ''T'' is ''n'', or, equivalently, if and only if it has a
perfect matching In graph theory, a perfect matching in a graph is a matching that covers every vertex of the graph. More formally, given a graph , a perfect matching in is a subset of edge set , such that every vertex in the vertex set is adjacent to exactly ...
.


Generalizations

The ''k''-varigated graph, ''k'' ≥ 3, can be defined similarly. A graph is said to be ''k''-varigated if its vertex set can be partitioned into ''k'' equal parts such that each vertex is adjacent to exactly one vertex from every other part not containing it.


Notes

* Characterizing the
degree sequence In graph theory, the degree (or valency) of a vertex of a graph is the number of edges that are incident to the vertex; in a multigraph, a loop contributes 2 to a vertex's degree, for the two ends of the edge. The degree of a vertex v is denoted ...
s of bivariegated graphs has been an unsolved problem in graph theory.


References

*. *. *. * Bhat-Nayak Vasanti N., Ranjan N. Naik, Further results on 2-variegated graphs, Utilitas Math. 12 (1977) 317–325. *. * *{{citation, last=Riddle, first=Fay A., year=1978, title=Bivariegated Graphs and Their Isomorphisms, publisher=University of Florida, series=Ph.D. dissertation. Graph families