Double-star snark
| Double-star snark | |
|---|---|
|
The Double-star snark | |
| Vertices | 30 |
| Edges | 45 |
| Radius | 4 |
| Diameter | 4 |
| Girth | 6 |
| Automorphisms | 80 |
| Chromatic number | 3 |
| Chromatic index | 4 |
| Properties |
Snark Hypohamiltonian |
In the mathematical field of graph theory, the double-star snark is a snark with 30 vertices and 45 edges.[1]
In 1975, Rufus Isaacs introduced two infinite families of snarks—the flower snark and the BDS snark, a family that includes the two Blanuša snarks, the Descartes snark and the Szekeres snark (BDS stands for Blanuša Descartes Szekeres).[2] Isaacs also discovered one 30-vertex snark that does not belongs to the BDS family and that is not a flower snark — the double-star snark.
As a snark, the double-star graph is a connected, bridgeless cubic graph with chromatic index equal to 4. The double-star snark is non-planar and non-hamiltonian but is hypohamiltonian.[3]
Gallery
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The chromatic number of the double-star snark is 3.
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The chromatic index of the double-star snark is 4.
References
- ↑ Weisstein, Eric W., "Double Star Snark", MathWorld.
- ↑ Isaacs, R. (1975), "Infinite families of non-trivial trivalent graphs which are not Tait-colorable", American Mathematical Monthly (Mathematical Association of America) 82 (3): 221–239, doi:10.2307/2319844, JSTOR 2319844
- ↑ Weisstein, Eric W., "Hypohamiltonian Graph", MathWorld.
