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Vertex-transitive graph

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Graph families defined by their automorphisms
distance-transitive distance-regular strongly regular
symmetric (arc-transitive) t-transitive, t ≥ 2 skew-symmetric
(if connected)
vertex- and edge-transitive
edge-transitive and regular edge-transitive
vertex-transitive regular (if bipartite)
biregular
Cayley graph zero-symmetric asymmetric

In the mathematical field of graph theory, a vertex-transitive graph is a graph G such that, given any two vertices v1 and v2 of G, there is some automorphism

such that

In other words, a graph is vertex-transitive if its automorphism group acts transitively upon its vertices.[1] A graph is vertex-transitive if and only if its graph complement is, since the group actions are identical.

Every symmetric graph without isolated vertices is vertex-transitive, and every vertex-transitive graph is regular. However, not all vertex-transitive graphs are symmetric (for example, the edges of the truncated tetrahedron), and not all regular graphs are vertex-transitive (for example, the Frucht graph).

Finite examples

The edges of the truncated tetrahedron form a vertex-transitive graph (also a Cayley graph) which is not symmetric.

Finite vertex-transitive graphs include the symmetric graphs (such as the Petersen graph, the Heawood graph and the vertices and edges of the Platonic solids). The finite Cayley graphs (such as cube-connected cycles) are also vertex-transitive, as are the vertices and edges of the Archimedean solids (though only two of these are symmetric). Potočnik, Spiga and Verret have constructed a census of all connected cubic vertex-transitive graphs on at most 1280 vertices. [2]

Properties

The edge-connectivity of a vertex-transitive graph is equal to the degree d, while the vertex-connectivity will be at least 2(d+1)/3.[3] If the degree is 4 or less, or the graph is also edge-transitive, or the graph is a minimal Cayley graph, then the vertex-connectivity will also be equal to d.[4]

Infinite examples

Infinite vertex-transitive graphs include:

Two countable vertex-transitive graphs are called quasi-isometric if the ratio of their distance functions is bounded from below and from above. A well known conjecture states that every infinite vertex-transitive graph is quasi-isometric to a Cayley graph. A counterexample has been proposed by Diestel and Leader.[5] Most recently, Eskin, Fisher, and Whyte confirmed the counterexample.[6]

See also


References

  1. ^ Godsil, Chris; Royle, Gordon (2001), Algebraic Graph Theory, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 207, New York: Springer-Verlag.
  2. ^ Potočnik P., Spiga P. and Verret G. (2012), Cubic vertex-transitive graphs on up to 1280 vertices, Journal of Symbolic Computation{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link).
  3. ^ Godsil, C. and Royle, G. (2001), Algebraic Graph Theory, Springer Verlag{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Babai, L. (1996), Technical Report TR-94-10, University of Chicago[1]
  5. ^ Diestel, Reinhard; Leader, Imre (2001), "A conjecture concerning a limit of non-Cayley graphs" (PDF), Journal of Algebraic Combinatorics, 14 (1): 17–25, doi:10.1023/A:1011257718029.
  6. ^ Eskin, Alex; Fisher, David; Whyte, Kevin (2005). "Quasi-isometries and rigidity of solvable groups". arXiv:math.GR/0511647..