Kneser graph

From Graph

Definition

Suppose and are positive integers. The Kneser graph is an undirected graph defined as follows. Fix a set of size (we usually take the set as for convenience). Then:

  1. The vertex set of is the collection of -element subsets of the fixed set of size .
  2. The edge set of is defined as follows: two vertices of are adjacent if and only if they are disjoint when viewed as subsets of the -element set.

Particular cases

Classes of cases

Condition on and Conclusion
The vertex set is empty, so the graph is a graph on no vertices
one-point graph
The vertex set is non-empty, but the edge set is empty, so the graph is an empty graph
In this case, the graph is a matching graph: it is a disjoint union of 2-cliques, with one 2-clique for each partition of the -set into two disjoint pieces of equal size.
This is the interesting case. In this case, the graph is connected and non-empty, but is not a complete graph.
complete graph
one-point graph

First few nontrivial cases

As indicated above, the interesting cases are where . We list the first few of these:

Kneser graph
5 2 Petersen graph
6 2 Fill this in later

Arithmetic functions

Size measures

Function Value Explanation
size of vertex set By definition, it is the number of -element subsets of a fixed -element set.
size of edge set This is the number of ways of dividing a set of size into two interchangeable substs of size and a left-over set of size .

Numerical invariants associated with vertices

We restrict attention to the case that for the expressions below.

Since the graph is a vertex-transitive graph, any numerical invariant associated to a vertex must be equal on all vertices of the graph. Below are listed some of these invariants:

Function Value Explanation
degree of a vertex We need to determine, for a given -element subset, the number of -element subsets disjoint from it. This is the same as the number of -element subsets of its set-theoretic complement, which has size .
eccentricity of a vertex If , it is 2
In general, it is something like twice the smallest integer greater than or equal to .