Games Graph
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In graph theory, the Games graph is the largest known locally linear strongly regular graph. Its parameters as a strongly regular graph are (729,112,1,20). This means that it has 729 vertices, and 40824 edges (112 per vertex). Each edge is in a unique triangle (it is a locally linear graph) and each non-adjacent pair of vertices have exactly 20 shared neighbors. It is named after Richard A. Games, who suggested its construction in an unpublished communication and wrote about related constructions.


Construction

The construction of this graph involves the unique (up to symmetry) 56-point cap set (a subset of points with no three in line) in PG(5,3), the five-dimensional projective geometry over a three-element field. The six-dimensional projective geometry, PG(6,3), can be partitioned into a six-dimensional affine space AG(6,3) and a copy of PG(5,3) (the points at infinity with respect to the affine space). The Games graph has as its vertices the 729 points of the affine space AG(6,3). Each line in the affine space goes through three of these points, and through a fourth point at infinity. The graph contains a triangle for every line of three affine points that passes through a point of the cap set.


Properties

Several of the graph's properties follow immediately from this construction. It has 729=3^6 vertices, because the number of points in an affine space is the size of the base field to the power of the dimension. For each affine point, there are 56 lines through cap set points, 56 triangles containing the corresponding vertex, and 112=56\times 2 neighbors of the vertex. And there can be no triangles other than the ones coming from the construction, because any other triangle would have to come from three different lines meeting in a common plane of PG(6,3), and the three cap set points of the three lines would all lie on the intersection of this plane with PG(5,3), which is a line. But this would violate the defining property of a cap set that it has no three points on a line, so no such extra triangle can exist. The remaining property of strongly regular graphs, that all non-adjacent pairs of points have the same number of shared neighbors, depends on the specific properties of the 5-dimensional cap set.


Related graphs

With the 3\times 3 Rook's graph and the
Brouwer–Haemers graph In the mathematical field of graph theory, the Brouwer–Haemers graph is a 20- regular undirected graph with 81 vertices and 810 edges. It is a strongly regular graph, a distance-transitive graph, and a Ramanujan graph. Although its con ...
, the Games graph is one of only three possible strongly regular graphs whose parameters have the form \bigl((n^2+3n-1)^2,n^2(n+3),1,n(n+1)\bigr). The same properties that produce a strongly regular graph from a cap set can also be used with an 11-point cap set in PG(4,3), producing a smaller strongly regular graph with parameters (243,22,1,2). This graph is the Berlekamp–Van Lint–Seidel graph.


References

{{reflist, refs= {{citation , last1 = Bondarenko , first1 = Andriy V. , last2 = Radchenko , first2 = Danylo V. , doi = 10.1016/j.jctb.2013.05.005 , issue = 4 , journal =
Journal of Combinatorial Theory The ''Journal of Combinatorial Theory'', Series A and Series B, are mathematical journals specializing in combinatorics and related areas. They are published by Elsevier. ''Series A'' is concerned primarily with structures, designs, and applicat ...
, mr = 3071380 , pages = 521–531 , series = Series B , title = On a family of strongly regular graphs with \lambda=1 , volume = 103 , year = 2013, arxiv = 1201.0383
{{citation , last1 = Berlekamp , first1 = E. R. , author1-link = Elwyn Berlekamp , last2 = van Lint , first2 = J. H. , author2-link = J. H. van Lint , last3 = Seidel , first3 = J. J. , doi = 10.1016/B978-0-7204-2262-7.50008-9 , journal = A Survey of Combinatorial Theory (Proc. Internat. Sympos., Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, Colo., 1971) , mr = 0364015 , pages = 25–30 , publisher = North-Holland , location = Amsterdam , title = A strongly regular graph derived from the perfect ternary Golay code , year = 1973, isbn = 9780720422627 , url = https://research.tue.nl/nl/publications/a-strongly-regular-graph-derived-from-the-perfect-ternary-golay-code(10db0cd0-72b4-4d07-bc44-83d07d86e7f0).html {{citation , last = Cameron , first = Peter J. , authorlink = Peter Cameron (mathematician) , doi = 10.1093/qmath/26.1.61 , journal = The Quarterly Journal of Mathematics , mr = 0366702 , pages = 61–73 , series = Second Series , title = Partial quadrangles , volume = 26 , year = 1975 {{citation , last = Games , first = Richard A. , doi = 10.1016/0097-3165(83)90002-X , issue = 2 , journal =
Journal of Combinatorial Theory The ''Journal of Combinatorial Theory'', Series A and Series B, are mathematical journals specializing in combinatorics and related areas. They are published by Elsevier. ''Series A'' is concerned primarily with structures, designs, and applicat ...
, mr = 712100 , pages = 126–144 , series = Series A , title = The packing problem for projective geometries over GF(3) with dimension greater than five , volume = 35 , year = 1983, doi-access = free . See in particular Table VII, p. 139, entry for r=5 and d=3.
{{citation , last = Hill , first = Raymond , doi = 10.1016/0012-365X(78)90120-6 , issue = 2 , journal =
Discrete Mathematics Discrete mathematics is the study of mathematical structures that can be considered "discrete" (in a way analogous to discrete variables, having a bijection with the set of natural numbers) rather than "continuous" (analogously to continuous f ...
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{{citation , last1 = van Lint , first1 = J. H. , author1-link = J. H. van Lint , last2 = Brouwer , first2 = A. E. , author2-link = Andries Brouwer , editor1-last = Jackson , editor1-first = David M. , editor1-link = David M. Jackson , editor2-last = Vanstone , editor2-first = Scott A. , editor2-link = Scott Vanstone , contribution = Strongly regular graphs and partial geometries , contribution-url = https://pure.tue.nl/ws/files/2394798/595248.pdf , location = London , mr = 782310 , pages = 85–122 , publisher = Academic Press , title = Enumeration and Design: Papers from the conference on combinatorics held at the University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ont., June 14–July 2, 1982 , year = 1984. See in particular pp. 114–115. Strongly regular graphs