Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Bouquet graph

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bouquet graph
Remove ads

In mathematics, a bouquet graph , for an integer parameter , is an undirected graph with one vertex and edges, all of which are self-loops. It is the graph-theoretic analogue of the topological rose, a space of circles joined at a point. When the context of graph theory is clear, it can be called more simply a bouquet.[1]

Thumb
Ribbon graph representation of an embedding of onto the projective plane.
Thumb
, a bouquet with one vertex and four self-loop edges

Although bouquets have a very simple structure as graphs, they are of some importance in topological graph theory because their graph embeddings can still be non-trivial. In particular, every cellularly embedded graph can be reduced to an embedded bouquet by a partial duality applied to the edges of any spanning tree of the graph,[2] or alternatively by contracting the edges of any spanning tree.

In graph-theoretic approaches to group theory, every Cayley–Serre graph (a variant of Cayley graphs with doubled edges) can be represented as the covering graph of a bouquet.[3]

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads