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On the extreme complexity of certain nearly regular graphs

Gregory P Constantine, Gregory C Magda

TL;DR

It is demonstrated that the seven known triangle-free strongly regular graphs, such as the Higman-Sims graph, are graphs of maximal complexity among all graphs of the same order and degree; their complements are shown to be of minimal complexity.

Abstract

The complexity of a graph is the number of its labeled spanning trees. It is demonstrated that the seven known triangle-free strongly regular graphs, such as the Higman-Sims graph, are graphs of maximal complexity among all graphs of the same order and degree; their complements are shown to be of minimal complexity. A generalization to nearly regular graphs with two distinct eigevalues of the Laplacian is presented. Conjectures and applications of these results to biological problems on neuronal activity are described.

On the extreme complexity of certain nearly regular graphs

TL;DR

It is demonstrated that the seven known triangle-free strongly regular graphs, such as the Higman-Sims graph, are graphs of maximal complexity among all graphs of the same order and degree; their complements are shown to be of minimal complexity.

Abstract

The complexity of a graph is the number of its labeled spanning trees. It is demonstrated that the seven known triangle-free strongly regular graphs, such as the Higman-Sims graph, are graphs of maximal complexity among all graphs of the same order and degree; their complements are shown to be of minimal complexity. A generalization to nearly regular graphs with two distinct eigevalues of the Laplacian is presented. Conjectures and applications of these results to biological problems on neuronal activity are described.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 4 sections, 1 equation.