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  2. Petersen graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petersen_graph

    Petersen graph as Kneser graph ,. The Petersen graph is the complement of the line graph of .It is also the Kneser graph,; this means that it has one vertex for each 2-element subset of a 5-element set, and two vertices are connected by an edge if and only if the corresponding 2-element subsets are disjoint from each other.

  3. Light characteristic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_characteristic

    A light characteristic is all of the properties that make a particular somewhat navigational light identifiable. Graphical and textual descriptions of navigational light sequences and colours are displayed on nautical charts and in Light Lists with the chart symbol for a lighthouse, lightvessel, buoy or sea mark with a light on it. Different ...

  4. Graph labeling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_labeling

    A graceful labeling; vertex labels are in black and edge labels in red. A graph is known as graceful if its vertices are labeled from 0 to | E |, the size of the graph, and if this vertex labeling induces an edge labeling from 1 to | E |. For any edge e, the label of e is the positive difference between the labels of the two vertices incident ...

  5. Graph (discrete mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_(discrete_mathematics)

    A graph with three vertices and three edges. A graph (sometimes called an undirected graph to distinguish it from a directed graph, or a simple graph to distinguish it from a multigraph) [4] [5] is a pair G = (V, E), where V is a set whose elements are called vertices (singular: vertex), and E is a set of unordered pairs {,} of vertices, whose elements are called edges (sometimes links or lines).

  6. Graph theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_theory

    The degree or valency of a vertex is the number of edges that are incident to it, where a loop is counted twice. The degree of a graph is the maximum of the degrees of its vertices. In an undirected simple graph of order n, the maximum degree of each vertex is n − 1 and the maximum size of the graph is ⁠ n(n − 1) / 2 ⁠.

  7. Graph coloring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_coloring

    Vertex coloring is often used to introduce graph coloring problems, since other coloring problems can be transformed into a vertex coloring instance. For example, an edge coloring of a graph is just a vertex coloring of its line graph, and a face coloring of a plane graph is just a vertex coloring of its dual. However, non-vertex coloring ...

  8. Vertex (graph theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertex_(graph_theory)

    A graph with 6 vertices and 7 edges where the vertex number 6 on the far-left is a leaf vertex or a pendant vertex. In discrete mathematics, and more specifically in graph theory, a vertex (plural vertices) or node is the fundamental unit of which graphs are formed: an undirected graph consists of a set of vertices and a set of edges (unordered pairs of vertices), while a directed graph ...

  9. Independent set (graph theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_set_(graph_theory)

    A vertex coloring of a graph corresponds to a partition of its vertex set into independent subsets. Hence the minimal number of colors needed in a vertex coloring, the chromatic number χ ( G ) {\displaystyle \chi (G)} , is at least the quotient of the number of vertices in G {\displaystyle G} and the independent number α ( G ) {\displaystyle ...