Triangle graph
This article defines a particular undirected graph, i.e., the definition here determines the graph uniquely up to graph isomorphism.
View a complete list of particular undirected graphs
Definition
This is a particular finite undirected graph defined as follows:
- It is a graph whose geometric realization is a triangle: it has three vertices and an edge between each pair of vertices.
- It is the cycle graph on 3 vertices, and is denoted .
- It is the complete graph on 3 vertices, and is denoted .
- It is the odd graph , i.e., the Kneser graph .
Explicit descriptions
Descriptions of vertex set and edge set
Vertex set:
Edge set:
Adjacency matrix
The adjacency matrix is:
Arithmetic functions
Size measures
| Function | Value | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| size of vertex set | 3 | As : As : As : |
| size of edge set | 3 | As : As : As : |
Numerical invariants associated with vertices
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 | 2 | As : 2 (independent of ) As : As : |
| eccentricity of a vertex | 1 | As : greatest integer function of equals greatest integer function of 3/2 equals 1 As : 1 (true for any ) As : |
Other numerical invariants
| Function | Value | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| clique number | 3 | As : 3 (since ; it's 2 for larger ) As : As : 3 |
| independence number | 1 | As : greatest integer function of equals greatest integer function of 3/2 equals 1 As : 1 (independent of ) |
| chromatic number | 3 | As : 3 since is odd As : |
| radius of a graph | 1 | Due to vertex-transitivity, the radius equals the eccentricity of any vertex, which has been computed above. |
| diameter of a graph | 1 | Due to vertex-transitivity, the radius equals the eccentricity of any vertex, which has been computed above. |
| odd girth | 3 | As : As : 3 (true for any ) As : |
| even girth | infinite | there are no cycles of even length |
| girth of a graph | 3 | minimum of even and odd girth |
Algebraic theory
The adjacency matrix is:
The matrix is uniquely defined (note that it centralizes all permutations). Below are some important associated algebraic invariants:
| Algebraic invariant | Value | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| characteristic polynomial | ||
| minimal polynomial | ||
| rank of adjacency matrix | 3 | |
| eigenvalues (roots of characteristic polynomial) | -1 (multiplicity 2), 2 (multiplicity 1) |