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A note on girth-diameter cages

Gabriela Araujo-Pardo, Marston Conder, Natalia García-Colín, György Kiss, Dimitri Leemans

Abstract

In this paper, we introduce a problem closely related to the Cage Problem and the Degree Diameter Problem. For integers $k\geq 2$, $g\geq 3$ and $d\geq 1$, we define a $(k;\, g,d)$-graph to be a $k$-regular graph with girth $g$ and diameter $d$. We denote by $n_0(k;\,g,d)$ the smallest possible order of such a graph, and, if such a graph exists, we call it a $(k;g,d)$-cage. In particular, we focus on $(k;\,5,4)$-graphs. We show that $n_0(k;\,5,4) \geq k^2+k+2$ for all $k$, and report on the determination of all $(k;\,5,4)$-cages for $k=3, 4$ and $5$ and examples with $k = 6$, and describe some examples of $(k;\,5,4)$-graphs which prove that $n_0(k;\,5,4) \leq 2k^2$ for infinitely many values of $k$.

A note on girth-diameter cages

Abstract

In this paper, we introduce a problem closely related to the Cage Problem and the Degree Diameter Problem. For integers , and , we define a -graph to be a -regular graph with girth and diameter . We denote by the smallest possible order of such a graph, and, if such a graph exists, we call it a -cage. In particular, we focus on -graphs. We show that for all , and report on the determination of all -cages for and and examples with , and describe some examples of -graphs which prove that for infinitely many values of .
Paper Structure (6 sections, 1 equation, 1 figure)

This paper contains 6 sections, 1 equation, 1 figure.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: The two graphs with degree 3, diameter 4 and girth 5

Theorems & Definitions (2)

  • Definition 1
  • proof