Glossary of graph theory

Look up Appendix:Glossary of graph theory in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

This is a glossary of graph theory. Graph theory is the study of graphs, systems of nodes or vertices connected in pairs by edges.

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G[S] is the induced subgraph of a graph G for vertex subset S.
The prime symbol is often used to modify notation for graph invariants so that it applies to the line graph instead of the given graph. For instance, α(G) is the independence number of a graph; α′(G) is the matching number of the graph, which equals the independence number of its line graph. Similarly, χ(G) is the chromatic number of a graph; χ′(G) is the chromatic index of the graph, which equals the chromatic number of its line graph.

A

achromatic
The achromatic number of a graph is the maximum number of colors in a complete coloring.[1]
acyclic
1.  A graph is acyclic if it has no cycles. An acyclic undirected graph is the same thing as a forest. Acyclic directed graphs are more often called directed acyclic graphs.[2]
2.  An acyclic coloring of an undirected graph is a proper coloring in which every two color classes induce a forest.[3]
adjacency matrix
The adjacency matrix of a graph is a matrix whose rows and columns are both indexed by vertices of the graph, with a one in the cell for row i and column j when vertices i and j are adjacent, and a zero otherwise.[4]
adjacent
The relation between two vertices that are both endpoints of the same edge.[2]
α
For a graph G, α(G) (using the Greek letter alpha) is its independence number (see independent), and α′(G) is its matching number (see matching).
alternating
In a graph with a matching, an alternating path is a path whose edges alternate between matched and unmatched edges. An alternating cycle is, similarly, a cycle whose edges alternate between matched and unmatched edges. An augmenting path is an alternating path that starts and ends at unsaturated vertices. A larger matching can be found as the symmetric difference of the matching and the augmenting path; a matching is maximum if and only if it has no augmenting path.
anti-edge
Synonym for non-edge, a pair of non-adjacent vertices.
anti-triangle
A three-vertex independent set, the complement of a triangle.
arborescence
Synonym for a rooted and directed tree; see tree.
arc
An edge of a directed graph, also sometimes called an arrow.
arrow
Synonym for arc, a directed edge, used especially in the context of quivers.

articulation
An articulation point or cut vertex is a vertex whose removal would disconnect the graph.
-ary
A k-ary tree is a rooted tree in which every internal vertex has no more than k children. A 1-ary tree is just a path. A 2-ary tree is also called a binary tree, although that term more properly refers to 2-ary trees in which the children of each node are distinguished as being left or right children (with at most one of each type).
augmenting
A special type of alternating path; see alternating.
automorphism
A graph automorphism is a symmetry of a graph, an isomorphism from the graph to itself.

B

bag
One of the sets of vertices in a tree decomposition.
balanced
A bipartite or multipartite graph is balanced if each two subsets of its vertex partition have sizes within one of each other.
bandwidth
The bandwidth of a graph G is the minimum, over all orderings of vertices of G, of the length of the longest edge (the number of steps in the ordering between its two endpoints). It is also one less than the size of the maximum clique in a proper interval completion of G, chosen to minimize the clique size.
biclique
Synonym for complete bipartite graph or complete bipartite subgraph; see complete.
biconnected
Synonym for 2-vertex-connected. See connected; for biconnected components, see component.
bipartite
A bipartite graph is a graph with no odd cycles; equivalently, it is a graph that may be properly colored with two colors. Bipartite graphs are often written G = (U,V,E) where U and V are the subsets of vertices of each color. However, unless the graph is connected, it may not have a unique 2-coloring.
biregular
A biregular graph is one in which there are only two different vertex degrees.
block
1.  A block or biconnected component is a maximal subgraph in which every two vertices or edges belong to a simple cycle. It may be a 2-vertex-connected subgraph, a bridge edge, or an isolated vertex. In a connected graph, the collection of blocks and the articulation points separating them form the vertices of a tree, the block-cut tree, whose edges connect blocks to the articulation points within those blocks. The block graph of a graph G is another graph whose vertices are the blocks of G, with an edge connecting two vertices when the corresponding blocks share an articulation point; that is, it is the intersection graph of the blocks of G.
2.  A block graph (also called a clique tree, and sometimes erroneously called a Husimi tree) is a graph all of whose blocks are complete. The block graph of any graph is a block graph, and every block graph may be constructed as the block graph of a graph.
bond
A minimal cut-set: a set of edges whose removal disconnects the graph, for which no proper subset has the same property.
book
1.  A book, book graph, or triangular book is a complete tripartite graph K1,1,n; a collection of n triangles joined at a shared edge.
2.  Another type of graph, also called a book, or a quadrilateral book, is a collection of 4-cycles joined at a shared edge; the Cartesian product of a star with an edge.
3.  A book embedding is an embedding of a graph onto a topological book, a space formed by joining a collection of half-planes along a shared line. Usually, the vertices of the embedding are required to be on the line, which is called the spine of the embedding, and the edges of the embedding are required to lie within a single half-plane, one of the pages of the book.
bramble
A collection of mutually touching connected subgraphs, where two subgraphs touch if they share a vertex or each includes one endpoint of an edge. The order of a bramble is the smallest size of a set of vertices that has a nonempty intersection with all of the subgraphs. The treewidth of a graph is the maximum order of any of its brambles.
branch-decomposition
A branch-decomposition of G is a hierarchical clustering of the edges of G, represented by an unrooted binary tree with its leaves labeled by the edges of G. The width of a branch-decomposition is the maximum, over edges e of this binary tree, of the number of shared vertices between the subgraphs determined by the edges of G in the two subtrees separated by e. The branchwidth of G is the minimum width of any branch-decomposition of G.
branchwidth
See branch-decomposition.
bridge
1.  A bridge, isthmus, or cut edge is an edge whose removal would disconnect the graph. A bridgeless graph is one that has no bridges; equivalently, a 2-edge-connected graph.
2.  Especially in the context of planarity testing, a bridge of a cycle is a maximal subgraph that is disjoint from the cycle and in which each two edges belong to a path that is internally disjoint from the cycle. A chord is a one-edge bridge. A peripheral cycle is a cycle with at most one bridge; it must be a face in any planar embedding of its graph.
bridgeless
A bridgeless graph is a graph that has no bridge edges; that is, a 2-edge-connected graph.
butterfly
1.  The butterfly graph has five vertices and six edges; it is formed by two triangles that share a vertex.
2.  The butterfly network is a graph used as a network architecture in distributed computing, closely related to the cube-connected cycles.

C

C
Cn is an n-vertex cycle graph; see cycle.
cactus
A cactus graph, cactus tree, cactus, or Husimi tree is a connected graph in which each edge belongs to at most one cycle. Its blocks are cycles or single edges. If, in addition, each vertex belongs to at most two blocks, then it is called a Christmas cactus.
cage
A cage is a regular graph with the smallest possible order for its girth.
canonical
canonization
A canonical form of a graph is an invariant such that two graphs have equal invariants if and only if they are isomorphic. Canonical forms may also be called canonical invariants or complete invariants, and are sometimes defined only for the graphs within a particular family of graphs. Graph canonization is the process of computing a canonical form.
card
A graph formed from a given graph by deleting one vertex, especially in the context of the reconstruction conjecture. See also deck, the multiset of all cards of a graph.
carving width
Carving width is a notion of graph width analogous to branchwidth, but using hierarchical clusterings of vertices instead of hierarchical clusterings of edges.
caterpillar
A caterpillar tree or caterpillar is a tree in which the internal nodes induce a path.
center
The center of a graph is the set of vertices of minimum eccentricity.
chain
1.  Synonym for walk.
2.  When applying methods from algebraic topology to graphs, an element of a chain complex, namely a set of vertices or a set of edges.
Cheeger constant
See expansion.
χ
χ(G) (using the Greek letter chi) is the chromatic number of G and χ′(G) is its chromatic index; see chromatic and coloring.
child
In a rooted tree, a child of a vertex v is a neighbor of v along an outgoing edge, one that is directed away from the root.
chord
chordal
1.  A chord of a cycle is an edge that does not belong to the cycle, for which both endpoints belong to the cycle. A chordal graph is a graph in which every cycle of four or more vertices has a chord, so the only induced cycles are triangles. A chordal bipartite graph is not chordal (unless it is a forest); it is a bipartite graph in which every cycle of six or more vertices has a chord, so the only induced cycles are 4-cycles.
2.  The chord of a circle; the intersection graph of a collection of chords is called a circle graph.
chromatic
Having to do with coloring; see color. Chromatic graph theory is the theory of graph coloring. The chromatic number χ(G) is the minimum number of colors needed in a proper coloring of G. χ′(G) is the chromatic index of G, the minimum number of colors needed in a proper edge coloring of G.
choosable
choosability
A graph is k-choosable if it has a list coloring whenever each vertex has a list of k available colors. The choosability of the graph is the smallest k for which it s k-choosable.
circle
A circle graph is the intersection graph of chords of a circle.
circuit
A circuit may refer to a simple cycle, a trail (a closed tour without repeated edges), or an element of the cycle space (an Eulerian spanning subgraph). The circuit rank of a graph is the dimension of its cycle space.
circumference
The circumference of a graph is the length of its longest simple cycle. The graph is Hamiltonian if and only if its circumference equals its order.
class
1.  A class of graphs or family of graphs is a (usually infinite) collection of graphs, often defined as the graphs having some specific property. The word "class" is used rather than "set" because, unless special restrictions are made (such as restricting the vertices to be drawn from a particular set, and defining edges to be sets of two vertices) classes of graphs are usually not sets when formalized using set theory.
2.  A color class of a colored graph is the set of vertices or edges having one particular color.
3.  In the context of Vizing's theorem, on edge coloring simple graphs, a graph is said to be of class one if its chromatic index equals its maximum degree, and class two if its chromatic index equals one plus the degree. According to Vizing's theorem, all simple graphs are either of class one or class two.
claw
A claw is a tree with one internal vertex and three leaves, or equivalently the complete bipartite graph K1,3. A claw-free graph is a graph that does not have an induced subgraph that is a claw.
clique
A clique is usually a complete subgraph, but some sources define it as a maximal complete subgraph, one that is not part of any larger complete subgraph. A k-clique is a clique of order k. The clique number κ(G) of a graph G is the order of its largest clique. A clique graph is an intersection graph of maximal cliques. See also biclique, a complete bipartite subgraph.
clique tree
A synonym for a block graph.
clique-width
The clique-width of a graph G is the minimum number of distinct labels needed to construct G by operations that create a labeled vertex, form the disjoint union of two labeled graphs, add an edge connecting all pairs of vertices with given labels, or relabel all vertices with a given label. The graphs of clique-width at most 2 are exactly the cographs.
closed
1.  A closed neighborhood is one that includes its central vertex; see neighbourhood.
2.  A closed walk is one that starts and ends at the same vertex; see walk.
3.  A graph is transitively closed if it equals its own transitive closure; see transitive.
4.  A graph property is closed under some operation on graphs if, whenever the argument or arguments to the operation have the property, then so does the result. For instance, hereditary properties are closed under induced subgraphs; monotone properties are closed under subgraphs; and minor-closed properties are closed under minors.
closure
1.  For the transitive closure of a directed graph, see transitive.
2.  A closure of a directed graph is a set of vertices that have no outgoing edges to vertices outside the closure. For instance, a sink is a one-vertex closure. The closure problem is the problem of finding a closure of minimum or maximum weight.
co-
This prefix has various meanings usually involving complement graphs. For instance, a cograph is a graph produced by operations that include complementation; a cocoloring is a coloring in which each vertex induces either an independent set (as in proper coloring) or a clique (as in a coloring of the complement).
color
coloring
1.  A graph coloring is a labeling of the vertices of a graph by elements from a given set of colors, or equivalently a partition of the vertices into subsets, called "color classes", each of which is associated with one of the colors.
2.  Some authors use "coloring", without qualification, to mean a proper coloring, one that assigns different colors to the endpoints of each edge. In graph coloring, the goal is to find a proper coloring that uses as few colors as possible; for instance, bipartite graphs are the graphs that have colorings with only two colors, and the four color theorem states that every planar graph can be colored with at most four colors. A graph is said to be k-colored if it has been (properly) colored with k colors, and k-colorable or k-chromatic if this is possible.
3.  Many variations of coloring have been studied, including edge coloring (coloring edges so that no two edges with the same endpoint share a color), list coloring (proper coloring with each vertex restricted to a subset of the available colors), acyclic coloring (every 2-colored subgraph is acyclic), co-coloring (every color class induces an independent set or a clique), complete coloring (every two color classes share an edge), and total coloring (both edges and vertices are colored).
4.  The coloring number of a graph is one plus the degeneracy. It is so called because applying a greedy coloring algorithm to a degeneracy ordering of the graph uses at most this many colors.
comparability
An undirected graph is a comparability graph if its vertices are the elements of a partially ordered set and two vertices are adjacent when they are comparable in the partial order. Equivalently, a comparability graph is a graph that has a transitive orientation. Many other classes of graphs can be defined as the comparability graphs of special types of partial order.
complement
The complement graph \bar{G} of a simple graph G is another graph on the same vertex set as G, with an edge for each two vertices that are not adjacent in G.
complete
1.  A complete graph is one in which every two vertices are adjacent: all edges that could exist are present. A complete graph with n vertices is often denoted Kn. A complete bipartite graph is one in which every two vertices on opposite sides of the partition of vertices are adjacent. A complete bipartite graph with a vertices on one side of the partition and b vertices on the other side is often denoted Ka,b. The same terminology and notation has also been extended to complete multipartite graphs, graphs in which the vertices are divided into more than two subsets and every pair of vertices in different subsets are adjacent; if the numbers of vertices in the subsets are a, b, c, ... then this graph is denoted Ka, b, c, ....
2.  A completion of a given graph is a supergraph that has some desired property. For instance, a chordal completion is a supergraph that is a chordal graph.
3.  A complete matching is a synonym for a perfect matching; see matching.
4.  A complete coloring is a proper coloring in which each pairs of colors is used for the endpoints of at least one edge. Every coloring with a minimum number of colors is complete, but there may exist complete colorings with larger numbers of colors. The achromatic number of a graph is the maximum number of colors in a complete coloring.
5.  A complete invariant of a graph is a synonym for a canonical form, an invariant that has different values for non-isomorphic graphs.
component
A connected component of a graph is a maximal connected subgraph. The term is also used for maximal subgraphs or subsets of a graph's vertices that have some higher order of connectivity, including biconnected components, triconnected components, and strongly connected components.
condensation
The condensation of a directed graph G is a directed acyclic graph with one vertex for each strongly connected component of G, and an edge connecting pairs of components that contain the two endpoints of at least one edge in G.
connected
A connected graph is one in which each pair of vertices forms the endpoints of a path. Higher forms of connectivity include strong connectivity in directed graphs (for each two vertices there are paths from one to the other in both directions), k-vertex-connected graphs (removing fewer than k vertices cannot disconnect the graph), and k-edge-connected graphs (removing fewer than k edges cannot disconnect the graph).
converse
The converse graph is a synonym for the transpose graph; see transpose.
core
1.  A k-core is the induced subgraph formed by removing all vertices of degree less than k, and all vertices whose degree becomes less than k after earlier removals. See degeneracy.
2.  A core is a graph G such that every graph homomorphism from G to itself is an isomorphism.
3.  The core of a graph G is a minimal graph H such that there exist homomorphisms from G to H and vice versa. H is unique up to isomorphism. It can be represented as an induced subgraph of G, and is a core in the sense that all of its self-homomorphisms are isomorphisms.
cotree
1.  The complement of a spanning tree.
2.  A rooted tree structure used to describe a cograph, in which each cograph vertex is a leaf of the tree, each internal node of the tree is labeled with 0 or 1, and two cograph vertices are adjacent if and only if their lowest common ancestor in the tree is labeled 1.
cover
A vertex cover is a set of vertices incident to every edge in a graph. An edge cover is a set of edges incident to every vertex in a graph.
critical
A critical graph for a given property is a graph that has the property but such that every subgraph formed by deleting a single vertex does not have the property. For instance, a factor-critical graph is one that has a perfect matching (a 1-factor) for every vertex deletion, but (because it has an odd number of vertices) has no perfect matching itself. Compare hypo-, used for graphs which do not have a property but for which every one-vertex deletion does.
cubic
A cubic graph is another name for a 3-regular graph, not to be confused with a hypercube graph or a partial cube.
cut
cut-set
A cut is a partition of the vertices into two subsets. An edge is said to span the cut if it has endpoints in both subsets, and a cut-set is the set of edges that span a cut. Thus, the removal of the cut-set disconnects the graph. A bond is a minimal cut-set. A minimum cut is a cut whose cut-set has minimum total weight, possibly restricted to cuts that separate a designated pair of vertices; they are characterized by the max-flow min-cut theorem.The cut space of a graph is a vector space having the cut-sets of the graph as its elements. An edge cut, more generally, is a set of edges whose removal disconnects the graph, and similarly a vertex cut or separating set is a set of vertices whose removal disconnects the graph. A one-edge cut is called a bridge, isthmus, or cut edge (see bridge). A one-vertex cut is called an articulation point or cut vertex (see articulation point).
cycle
A cycle may either refer to a closed walk (also called a tour) or more specifically to a closed walk without repeated vertices or edges (a simple cycle). In either case, the choice of starting vertex is usually considered unimportant: cyclic permutations of the walk produce the same cycle. Important special cases of cycles include Hamiltonian cycles, induced cycles, peripheral cycles, and the shortest cycle, which defines the girth of a graph. A k-cycle is a cycle of length k; for instance a 2-cycle is a digon and a 3-cycle is a triangle. A cycle graph is a graph that is itself a simple cycle; a cycle graph with n vertices is commonly denoted Cn. The cycle space is a vector space generated by simple cycles in a graph.

D

DAG
Abbreviation for directed acyclic graph, a directed graph without any directed cycles.
deck
The multiset of graphs formed from a single graph G by deleting a single vertex in all possible ways, especially in the context of the reconstruction conjecture. An edge-deck is formed in the same way by deleting a single edge in all possible ways. The graphs in a deck are also called cards. See also critical (graphs that have a property that is not held by any card) and hypo- (graphs that do not have a property that is held by all cards).
decomposition
See tree decomposition, path decomposition, or branch-decomposition.
degenerate
degeneracy
A k-degenerate graph is an undirected graph in which every induced subgraph has minimum degree at most k. The degeneracy of a graph is the smallest k for which it is k-degenerate. A degeneracy ordering is an ordering of the vertices such that each vertex has minimum degree in the induced subgraph of it and all later vertices; in a degeneracy ordering of a k-degenerate graph, every vertex has at most k later neighbours. Degeneracy is also known as the k-core number, width, and linkage, and one plus the degeneracy is also called the coloring number or Szekeres–Wilf number. k-degenerate graphs have also been called k-inductive graphs.
degree
1.  The degree of a vertex in a graph is its number of incident edges.[2] The degree of a graph G (or its maximum degree) is the maximum of the degrees of its vertices, often denoted Δ(G); the minimum degree of G is the minimum of its vertex degrees, often denoted δ(G). Degree is sometimes called valency; the degree of v in G may be denoted dG(v), d(G), or deg(v). The total degree is the sum of the degrees of all vertices; by the handshaking lemma it is an even number. The degree sequence is the collection of degrees of all vertices, in sorted order from largest to smallest. In a directed graph, one may distinguish the in-degree (number of incoming edges) and out-degree (number of outgoing edges).[2]
2.  The homomorphism degree of a graph is a synonym for its Hadwiger number, the order of the largest clique minor.
Δ, δ
Δ(G) (using the Greek letter delta) is the maximum degree of a vertex in G, and δ(G) is the minimum degree; see degree.
diameter
The diameter of a graph is the maximum pairwise distance between any two of its vertices.
diamond
The diamond graph is an undirected graph with four vertices and five edges.
digon
A digon is a simple cycle of length two in a directed graph or a multigraph. Digons cannot occur in simple undirected graphs, as forming a closed walk by repeating the same edge twice does not produce a simple cycle.
digraph
Synonym for directed graph.[2]
directed
A directed graph is one in which the edges have a distinguished direction, from one vertex to another.[2] In a mixed graph, a directed edge is again one that has a distinguished direction; directed edges may also be called arcs or arrows.
disconnected
Not connected.
disjoint
1.  Two subgraphs are edge disjoint if they share no edges, and vertex disjoint if they share no vertices.
2.  The disjoint union of two or more graphs is a graph whose vertex and edge sets are the disjoint unions of the corresponding sets.
distance
The distance between any two vertices in a graph is the length of the shortest path having the two vertices as its endpoints.
domatic
A domatic partition of a graph is a partition of the vertices into dominating sets. The domatic number of the graph is the maximum number of dominating sets in such a partition.
dominating
A dominating set is a set of vertices that includes or is adjacent to every vertex in the graph; not to be confused with a vertex cover, a vertex set that is incident to all edges in the graph. Important special types of dominating sets include independent dominating sets (dominating sets that are also independent sets) and connected dominating sets (dominating sets that induced connected subgraphs). A single-vertex dominating set may also be called a universal vertex. The domination number of a graph is the number of vertices in the smallest dominating set.

E

E
E(G) is the edge set of G; see edge set.
ear
An ear of a graph is a path whose endpoints may coincide but in which otherwise there are no repetitions of vertices or edges. An ear decomposition is a partition of the edges of a graph into a sequence of ears, each of whose endpoints (after the first one) belong to a previous ear and each of whose interior points do not belong to any previous ear. An open ear is a simple path (an ear that does not repeat any vertices), and an open ear decomposition is an ear decomposition in which each ear after the first is open; a graph has an open ear decomposition if and only if it is biconnected. An ear is odd if it has an odd number of edges, and an odd ear decomposition is an ear decomposition in which each ear is odd; a graph has an odd ear decomposition if and only if it is factor-critical.
eccentricity
The eccentricity of a vertex is the farthest distance from it to any other vertex.
edge
An edge is (together with vertices) one of the two basic units out of which graphs are constructed. Each edge has two (or in hypergraphs, more) vertices to which it is attached, called its endpoints. Edges may be directed or undirected; undirected edges are also called lines and directed edges are also called arcs or arrows. In an undirected simple graph, an edge may be represented as the set of its vertices, and in a directed simple graph it may be represented as an ordered pair of its vertices. An edge that connects vertices x and y is sometimes written xy.
edge set
The set of vertices of a given graph G, sometimes denoted by E(G).
edgeless graph
The edgeless graph or totally disconnected graph on a given set of vertices is the graph that has no edges. It is sometimes called the empty graph, but this term can also refer to a graph with no vertices.
embedding
A graph embedding is a topological representation of a graph as a subset of a topological space with each vertex represented as a point, each edge represented as a curve having the endpoints of the edge as endpoints of the curve, and no other intersections between vertices or edges. A planar graph is a graph that has such an embedding onto the Euclidean plane, and a toroidal graph is a graph that has such an embedding onto a torus. The genus of a graph is the minimum possible genus of a two-dimensional manifold onto which it can be embedded.
empty graph
1.  An edgeless graph on a set of vertices.
2.  The graph with no vertices and no edges.
end
An end of an infinite graph is an equivalence class of rays, where two rays are equivalent if there is a third ray that includes infinitely many vertices from both of them.
endpoint
One of the two vertices incident to a given edge, or one of the two vertices at the start and end of a walk or path.
enumeration
Graph enumeration is the problem of counting the graphs in a given class of graphs, as a function of their order. More generally, enumeration problems can refer either to problems of counting a certain class of combinatorial objects (such as cliques, independent sets, colorings, or spanning trees), or of algorithmically listing all such objects.
Eulerian
An Eulerian path is a walk that uses every edge of a graph exactly once. An Eulerian circuit (also called an Eulerian cycle or an Euler tour) is a closed walk that uses every edge exactly once. An Eulerian graph is a graph that has an Eulerian circuit. For an undirected graph, this means that the graph is connected and every vertex has even degree. For a directed graph, this means that the graph is strongly connected and every vertex has in-degree equal to the out-degree. In some cases, the connectivity requirement is loosened, and a graph meeting only the degree requirements is called Eulerian.
even
Divisible by two; for instance, an even cycle is a cycle whose length is even.
expander
An expander graph is a graph whose edge expansion, vertex expansion, or spectral expansion is bounded away from zero.
expansion
1.  The edge expansion, isoperimetric number, or Cheeger constant of a graph G is the minimum ratio, over subsets S of at most half of the vertices of G, of the number of edges leaving S to the number of vertices in S.
2.  The vertex expansion, vertex isoperimetric number, or magnification of a graph G is the minimum ratio, over subsets S of at most half of the vertices of G, of the number of vertices outside but adjacent to S to the number of vertices in S.
3.  The unique neighbor expansion of a graph G is the minimum ratio, over subsets of at most half of the vertices of G, of the number of vertices outside S but adjacent to a unique vertex in S to the number of vertices in S.
4.  The spectral expansion of a d-regular graph G is the spectral gap between the largest eigenvalue d of its adjacency matrix and the second-largest eigenvalue.
5.  A family of graphs has bounded expansion if all its r-shallow minors have a ratio of edges to vertices bounded by a function of r, and polynomial expansion if the function of r is a polynomial.

F

factor
A factor of a graph is a spanning subgraph: a subgraph that includes all of the vertices of the graph. The term is primarily used in the context of regular subgraphs: a k-factor is a factor that is k-regular. In particular, a 1-factor is the same thing as a perfect matching. A factor-critical graph is a graph for which deleting any one vertex produces a graph with a 1-factor.
face
In a plane graph or graph embedding, a connected component of the subset of the plane or surface of the embedding that is disjoint from the graph. For an embedding in the plane, all but one face will be bounded; the one exceptional face that extends to infinity is called the outer face.
factorization
A graph factorization is a partition of the edges of the graph into factors; a k-factorization is a partition into k-factors. For instance a 1-factorization is an edge coloring with the additional property that each vertex is incident to an edge of each color.
family
A synonym for class.
finite
A graph is finite if it has a finite number of vertices and a finite number of edges. Many sources assume that all graphs are finite without explicitly saying so. A graph is locally finite if each vertex has a finite number of incident edges. An infinite graph is a graph that is not finite: it has infinitely many vertices, infinitely many edges, or both.
first order
The first order logic of graphs is a form of logic in which variables represent vertices of a graph, and there exists a binary predicate to test whether two vertices are adjacent. To be distinguished from second order logic, in which variables can also represent sets of vertices or edges.
-flap
For a set of vertices X, an X-flap is a connected component of the induced subgraph formed by deleting X. The flap terminology is commonly used in the context of havens, functions that map small sets of vertices to their flaps. See also the bridge of a cycle, which is either a flap of the cycle vertices or a chord of the cycle.
forbidden
A forbidden graph characterization is a characterization of a family of graphs as being the graphs that do not have certain other graphs as subgraphs, induced subgraphs, or minors. If H is one of the graphs that does not occur as a subgraph, induced subgraph, or minor, then H is said to be forbidden.
forest
A forest is an undirected graph without cycles (a disjoint union of unrooted trees), or a directed graph formed as a disjoint union of rooted trees.
Frucht
1.  Robert Frucht
2.  The Frucht graph, one of the two smallest cubic graphs with no nontrivial symmetries.
3.  Frucht's theorem that every finite group is the group of symmetries of a finite graph.
full
Synonym for induced.

G

G
A variable often used to denote a graph.
genus
The genus of a graph is the minimum genus of a surface onto which it can be embedded; see embedding.
geodesic
As a noun, a geodesic is a synonym for a shortest path. When used as an adjective, it means related to shortest paths or shortest path distances.
giant
In the theory of random graphs, a giant component is a connected component that contains a constant fraction of the vertices of the graph. In standard models of random graphs, there is typically at most one giant component.
girth
The girth of a graph is the length of its shortest cycle.
graph
The fundamental object of study in graph theory, a system of vertices connected in pairs by edges. Often subdivided into directed graphs or undirected graphs according to whether the edges have an orientation or not. Mixed graphs include both types of edges.
Grötzsch
1.  Herbert Grötzsch
2.  The Grötzsch graph, the smallest triangle-free graph requiring four colors in any proper coloring.
3.  Grötzsch's theorem that triangle-free planar graphs can always be colored with at most three colors.

H

H
A variable often used to denote a graph, especially when another graph has already been denoted by G.
H-coloring
An H-coloring of a graph G (where H is also a graph) is a homomorphism from H to G.
H-free
A graph is H-free if it does not have an induced subgraph isomorphic to H, that is, if H is a forbidden induced subgraph. The H-free graphs are the family of all graphs (or, often, all finite graphs) that are H-free.[5] For instance the triangle-free graphs are the graphs that do not have a triangle graph as a subgraph. The property of being H-free is always hereditary. A graph is H-minor-free if it does not have a minor isomorphic to H.
Hadwiger
1.  Hugo Hadwiger
2.  The Hadwiger number of a graph is the order of the largest complete minor of the graph. It is also called the contraction clique number or the homomorphism degree.
3.  The Hadwiger conjecture is the conjecture that the Hadwiger number is never less than the chromatic number.
Hamiltonian
A Hamiltonian path or Hamiltonian cycle is a simple spanning path or simple spanning cycle: it covers all of the vertices in the graph exactly once. A graph is Hamiltonian if it contains a Hamiiltonian cycle, and traceable if it contains a Hamiltonian path.
haven
A k-haven is a function that maps every set X of fewer than k vertices to one of its flaps, often satisfying additional consistency conditions. The order of a haven is the number k. Havens can be used to characterize the treewidth of finite graphs and the ends and Hadwiger numbers of infinite graphs.
hereditary
A hereditary property of graphs is a property that is closed under induced subgraphs: if G has a hereditary property, then so must every induced subgraph of G. Compare monotone (closed under all subgraphs) or minor-closed (closed under minors).
hole
A hole is an induced cycle of length four or more. An odd hole is a hole of odd length. An anti-hole is an induced subgraph of order four whose complement is a cycle; equivalently, it is a hole in the complement graph. This terminology is mainly used in the context of perfect graphs, which are characterized by the strong perfect graph theorem as being the graphs with no odd holes or odd anti-holes. The hole-free graphs are the same as the chordal graphs.
homomorphic equivalence
Two graphs are homomorphically equivalent if there exist two homomorphisms, one from each graph to the other graph.
homomorphism
1.  A graph homomorphism is a mapping from the vertex set of one graph to the vertex set of another graph that maps adjacent vertices to adjacent vertices. This type of mapping between graphs is the one that is most commonly used in category-theoretic approaches to graph theory. A proper graph coloring can equivalently be described as a homomorphism to a complete graph.
2.  The homomorphism degree of a graph is a synonym for its Hadwiger number, the order of the largest clique minor.
hyperedge
An edge in a hypergraph, having any number of endpoints, in contrast to the requirement that edges of graphs have exactly two endpoints.
hypercube
A hypercube graph is a graph formed from the vertices and edges of a geometric hypercube.
hypergraph
A hypergraph is a generalization of a graph in which each edge (called a hyperedge in this context) may have more than two endpoints.
hypo-
This prefix, in combination with a graph property, indicates a graph that does not have the property but such that every subgraph formed by deleting a single vertex does have the property. For instance, a hypohamiltonian graph is one that does not have a Hamiltonian cycle, but for which every one-vertex deletion produces a Hamiltonian subgraph. Compare critical, used for graphs which have a property but for which every one-vertex deletion does not.[6]

I

in-degree
The number of incoming edges in a directed graph; see degree.
incidence
An incidence in a graph is a vertex-edge pair such that the vertex is an endpoint of the edge.
incidence matrix
The incidence matrix of a graph is a matrix whose rows are indexed by vertices of the graph, and whose columns are indexed by edges, with a one in the cell for row i and column j when vertex i and edge j are incident, and a zero otherwise.
incident
The relation between an edge and one of its endpoints.[2]
incomparability
An incomparability graph is the complement of a comparability graph; see comparability.
independent
1.  An independent set is a set of vertices that induces an edgeless subgraph. It may also be called a stable set or a coclique. The independence number α(G) is the size of the maximum independent set.
2.  In the graphic matroid of a graph, a subset of edges is independent if the corresponding subgraph is a tree or forest. In the bicircular matroid, a subset of edges is independent if the corresponding subgraph is a pseudoforest.
indifference
An indifference graph is another name for a proper interval graph or unit interval graph; see proper.
induced
An induced subgraph or full subgraph of a graph is a subgraph formed from a subset of vertices and from all of the edges that have both endpoints in the subset. Special cases include induced paths and induced cycles, induced subgraphs that are paths or cycles.
inductive
Synonym for degenerate.
infinite
An infinite graph is one that is not finite; see finite.
internal
A vertex of a path or tree is internal if it is not a leaf; that is, if its degree is greater than one. Two paths are internally disjoint (some people call it independent) if they do not have any vertex in common, except the first and last ones.
intersection
1.  The intersection of two graphs is their largest common subgraph, the graph formed by the vertices and edges that belong to both graphs.
2.  An intersection graph is a graph whose vertices correspond to sets or geometric objects, with an edge between two vertices exactly when the corresponding two sets or objects have a nonempty intersection. Several classes of graphs may be defined as the intersection graphs of certain types of objects, for instance chordal graphs (intersection graphs of subtrees of a tree), circle graphs (intersection graphs of chords of a circle), interval graphs (intersection graphs of intervals of a line), line graphs (intersection graphs of the edges of a graph), and clique graphs (intersection graphs of the maximal cliques of a graph). Every graph is an intersection graph for some family of sets, and this family is called an intersection representation of the graph. The intersection number of a graph G is the minimum total number of elements in any intersection representation of G.
interval
An interval graph is an intersection graph of intervals of a line.
interval thickness
A synonym for pathwidth.
invariant
A synonym of pathwidth.
isolated
An isolated vertex of a graph is a vertex whose degree is zero, that is, a vertex with no incident edges.[2]
isomorphic
Two graphs are isomorphic if there is an isomorphism between them; see isomorphism.
isomorphism
A graph isomorphism is a one-to-one incidence preserving correspondence of the vertices and edges of one graph to the vertices and edges of another graph. Two graphs related in this way are said to be isomorphic.
isoperimetric
See expansion.
isthmus
Synonym for bridge, in the sense of an edge whose removal disconnects the graph.

K

K
For the notation for complete graphs, complete bipartite graphs, and complete multipartite graphs, see complete.
κ
κ(G) (using the Greek letter kappa) is the size of the maximum clique in G; see clique.

L

L
L(G) is the line graph of G; see line.
label
1.  Information associated with a vertex or edge of a graph. A labeled graph is a graph whose vertices or edges have labels. The terms vertex-labeled or edge-labeled may be used to specify which objects of a graph have labels. Graph labeling refers to several different problems of assigning labels to graphs subject to certain constraints. See also graph coloring, in which the labels are interpreted as colors.
2.  In the context of graph enumeration, the vertices of a graph are said to be labeled if they are all distinguishable from each other. For instance, this can be made to be true by fixing a one-to-one correspondence between the vertices and the integers from 1 to the order of the graph. When vertices are labeled, graphs that are isomorphic to each other (but with different vertex orderings) are counted as separate objects. In contrast, when the vertices are unlabeled, graphs that are isomorphic to each other are not counted separately.
leaf
A leaf vertex or pendant vertex (especially in a tree) is a vertex whose degree is 1. A leaf edge or pendant edge is the edge connecting a leaf vertex to its single neighbour.
length
In an unweighted graph, the length of a cycle, path, or walk is the number of edges it uses. In a weighted graph, it may instead be the sum of the weights of the edges that it uses. Length is used to define the shortest path, girth (shortest cycle length), and longest path between two vertices in a graph.
line
A synonym for an undirected edge. The line graph L(G) of a graph G is a graph with a vertex for each edge of G and an edge for each pair of edge that share an endpoint in G.
linkage
A synonym for degeneracy.
list
1.  An adjacency list is a computer representation of graphs for use in graph algorithms.
2.  List coloring is a variation of graph coloring in which each vertex has a list of available colors.
local
A local property of a graph is a property that is determined only by the neighbourhoods of the vertices in the graph. For instance, a graph is locally finite if all of its neighborhoods are finite.
loop
A loop or self-loop is an edge both of whose endpoints are the same vertex. It forms a cycle of length 1. These are not allowed in simple graphs.

M

magnification
Synonym for vertex expansion.
matching
A matching is a set of edges in which no two share any vertex. A vertex is matched or saturated if it is one of the endpoints of an edge in the matching. A perfect matching or complete matching is a matching that matches every vertex; it may also be called a 1-factor, and can only exist when the order is even. A near-perfect matching, in a graph with odd order, is one that saturates all but one vertex. A maximum matching is a matching that uses as many edges as possible; the matching number α′(G) of a graph G is the number of edges in a maximum matching. A maximal matching is a matching to which no additional edges can be added.
maximal
1.  A subgraph of given graph G is maximal for a particular property if it has that property but no other supergraph of it that is also a subgraph of G also has the same property. That is, it is a maximal element of the subgraphs with the property. For instance, a maximal clique is a complete subgraph that cannot be expanded to a larger complete subgraph. The word "maximal" should be distinguished from "maximum": a maximum subgraph is always maximal, but not necessarily vice versa.
2.  A simple graph with a given property is maximal for that property if it is not possible to add any more edges to it (keeping the vertex set unchanged) while preserving both the simplicity of the graph and the property. Thus, for instance, a maximal planar graph is a planar graph such that adding any more edges to it would create a non-planar graph.
maximum
A subgraph of a given graph G is maximum for a particular property if it is the largest subgraph (by order or size) among all subgraphs with that property. For instance, a maximum clique is any of the largest cliques in a given graph.
minimal
A subgraph of given graph is minimal for a particular property if it has that property but no proper subgraph of it also has the same property. That is, it is a minimal element of the subgraphs with the property.
minor
A graph H is a minor of another graph G if H can be obtained by deleting edges or vertices from G and contracting edges in G. It is a shallow minor if it can be formed as a minor in such a way that the subgraphs of G that were contracted to form vertices of H all have small diameter. H is a topological minor of G if G has a subgraph that is a subdvision of H. A graph is H-minor-free if it does not have H as a minor. A family of graphs is minor-closed if it is closed under minors; the Robertson–Seymour theorem characterizes minor-closed families as having a finite set of forbidden minors.
mixed
A mixed graph is a graph that may include both directed and undirected edges.
monotone
A monotone property of graphs is a property that is closed under subgraphs: if G has a hereditary property, then so must every subgraph of G. Compare hereditary (closed under induced subgraphs) or minor-closed (closed under minors).
Moore graph
A Moore graph is a regular graph for which the Moore bound is met exactly. The Moore bound is an inequality relating the degree, diameter, and order of a graph, proved by Edward F. Moore. Every Moore graph is a cage.
multigraph
A multigraph is a graph that allows multiple adjacencies (and, often, self-loops); a graph that is not required to be simple.
multiple adjacency
A multiple adjacency or multiple edge is a set of more than one edge that all have the same endpoints (in the same direction, in the case of directed graphs). A graph with multiple edges is often called a multigraph.
multiplicity
The multiplicity of an edge is the number of edges in a multiple adjacency. The multiplicity of a graph is the maximum multiplicity of any of its edges.

N

N
For the notation for open and closed neighborhoods, see neighbourhood.
neighbour
A vertex that is adjacent to a given vertex.
neighbourhood
The open neighbourhood (or neighborhood) of a vertex v is the subgraph induced by all vertices that are adjacent to v. The closed neighbourhood is defined in the same way but also includes v itself. The open neighborhood of v in G may be denoted NG(v) or N(v), and the closed neighborhood may be denoted NG[v] or N[v]. When the openness or closedness of a neighborhood is not specified, it is assumed to be open.
node
A synonym for vertex.
non-edge
A non-edge or anti-edge is a pair of vertices that are not adjacent; the edges of the complement graph.
null graph
See empty graph.

O

odd
1.  An odd cycle is a cycle whose length is odd. The odd girth of a non-bipartite graph is the length of its shortest odd cycle. An odd hole is a special case of an odd cycle: one that is induced and has four or more vertices.
2.  An odd vertex is a vertex whose degree is odd. By the handshaking lemma every finite undirected graph has an even number of odd vertices.
3.  An odd ear is a simple path or simple cycle with an odd number of edges, used in odd ear decompositions of factor-critical graphs; see ear.
4.  An odd chord is an edge connecting two vertices that are an odd distance apart in an even cycle. Odd chords are used to define strongly chordal graphs.
5.  An odd graph is a special case of a Kneser graph, having one vertex for each (n 1)-element subset of a (2n 1)-element set, and an edge connecting two subsets when their corresponding sets are disjoint.
open
1.  See neighbourhood.
2.  See walk.
order
1.  The order of a graph G is the number of its vertices, |V(G)|. The variable n is often used for this quantity. See also size, the number of edges.
2.  A type of logic of graphs; see first order and second order.
3.  An order or ordering of a graph is an arrangement of its vertices into a sequence, especially in the context of topological ordering (an order of a directed acyclic graph in which every edge goes from an earlier vertex to a later vertex in the order) and degeneracy ordering (an order in which each vertex has minimum degree in the induced subgraph of it and all later vertices).
4.  For the order of a haven or bramble, see haven and bramble.
orientation
oriented
An orientation of an undirected graph is an assignment of directions to its edges, making it into a directed graph. An oriented graph is one that has been assigned an orientation. So, for instance, a polytree is an oriented tree; it differs from a directed tree (an arborescence) in that there is no requirement of consistency in the directions of its edges. Other special types of orientation include tournaments, orientations of complete graphs; strong orientations, orientations that are strongly connected; acyclic orientations, orientations that are acyclic; Eulerian orientations, orientations that are Eulerian; and transitive orientations, orientations that are transitively closed.
out-degree
See degree.
outer
See face.
outerplanar
An outerplanar graph is a graph that can be embedded in the plane (without crossings) so that all vertices are on the outer face of the graph.

P

path
A path may either be a walk (a sequence of vertices and edges, with both endpoints of an edge appearing adjacent to it in the sequence) or a simple path (a walk with no repetitions of vertices or edges), depending on the source. Important special cases include induced paths and shortest paths.
path decomposition
A path decomposition of a graph G is a tree decomposition whose underlying tree is a path. Its width is defined in the same way as for tree decompositions, as one less than the size of the largest bag. The minimum width of any path decomposition of G is the pathwidth of G.
pathwidth
The pathwidth of a graph G is the minimum width of a path decomposition of G. It may also be defined in terms of the clique number of an interval completion of G. It is always between the bandwidth and the treewidth of G. It is also known as interval thickness, vertex separation number, or node searching number.
pendant
See leaf.
perfect
1.  A perfect graph is a graph in which, in every induced subgraph, the chromatic number equals the clique number. The perfect graph theorem and strong perfect graph theorem are two theorems about perfect graphs, the former proving that their complements are also perfect and the latter proving that they are exactly the graphs with no odd holes or anti-holes.
2.  A perfectly orderable graph is a graph whose vertices can be ordered in such a way that a greedy coloring algorithm with this ordering optimally colors every induced subgraph. The perfectly orderable graphs are a subclass of the perfect graphs.
3.  A perfect matching is a matching that saturates every vertex; see matching.
peripheral
1.  A peripheral cycle or non-separating cycle is a cycle with at most one bridge.

2.  A peripheral vertex is a vertex whose eccentricity is maximum. In a tree, this must be a leaf.
Petersen
1.  Julius Petersen
2.  The Petersen graph, a 10-vertex 15-edge graph frequently used as a counterexample.
3.  Petersen's theorem that every bridgeless cubic graph has a perfect matching.
planar
A planar graph is a graph that has an embedding onto the Euclidean plane. A plane graph is a planar graph for which a particular embedding has already been fixed. A k-planar graph is one that can be drawn in the plane with at most k crossings per edge.
polytree
A polytree is an oriented tree; equivalently, a directed acyclic graph whose underlying undirected graph is a tree.
proper
1.  A proper subgraph is a subgraph that removes at least one vertex or edge relative to the whole graph; for finite graphs, proper subgraphs are never isomorphic to the whole graph, but for infinite graphs they can be.
2.  A proper coloring is an assignment of colors to the vertices of a graph (a coloring) that assigns different colors to the endpoints of each edge; see color.
3.  A proper interval graph or proper circular arc graph is an intersection graph of a collection of intervals or circular arcs (respectively) such that no interval or arc contains another interval or arc. Proper interval graphs are also called unit interval graphs (because they can always be represented by unit intervals) or indifference graphs.
property
A graph property is something that can be true of some graphs and false of others, and that depends only on the graph structure and not on incidental information such as labels. Graph properties may equivalently be described in terms of classes of graphs (the graphs that have a given property). More generally, a graph property may also be a function of graphs that is again independent of incidental information, such as the size, order, or degree sequence of a graph; this more general definition of a property is also called an invariant of the graph.
pseudoforest
A pseudoforest is an undirected graph in which each connected component has at most one cycle, or a directed graph in which each vertex has at most one outgoing edge.
pseudograph
A pseudograph is a graph or multigraph that allows self-loops.
proper
A proper subgraph is a subgraph that does not equal the whole graph.

Q

quasi-line graph
A quasi-line graph or locally co-bipartite graph is a graph in which the open neighborhood of every vertex can be partitioned into two cliques. These graphs are always claw-free and they include as a special case the line graphs. They are used in the structure theory of claw-free graphs.
quiver
A quiver is a directed multigraph, as used in category theory. The edges of a quiver are called arrows.

R

radius
The radius of a graph is the maximum eccentricity of any vertex.
Ramanujan
A Ramanujan graph is a graph whose spectral expansion is as large as possible. That is, it is a d-regular graph, such that the second-largest eigenvalue of its adjacency matrix is at most 2\sqrt{d-1}.
ray
A ray, in an infinite graph, is an infinite simple path with exactly one endpoint. The ends of a graph are equivalence classes of rays.
recognizable
In the context of the reconstruction conjecture, a graph property is recognizable if its truth can be determined from the deck of the graph. Many graph properties are known to be recognizable. If the reconstruction conjecture is true, all graph properties are recognizable.
reconstruction
The reconstruction conjecture states that each undirected graph G is uniquely determined by its deck, a multiset of graphs formed by removing one vertex from G in all possible ways. In this context, reconstruction is the formation of a graph from its deck.
regular
A graph is d-regular when all of its vertices have degree d. A regular graph is a graph that is d-regular for some d.
reverse
See transpose.
root
A designated vertex in a graph, particularly in directed trees and rooted graphs.

S

second order
The second order logic of graphs is a form of logic in which variables may represent vertices, edges, sets of vertices, and (sometimes) sets of edges. This logic includes predicates for testing whether a vertex and edge are incident, as well as whether a vertex or edge belongs to a set. To be distinguished from first order logic, in which variables can only represent vertices.
saturated
See matching.
searching number
Node searching number is a synonym for pathwidth.
self-loop
Synonym for loop.
separation number
Vertex separation number is a synonym for pathwidth.

simple
1.  A simple graph is a graph with no loops and with no multiple adjacencies. That is, each edge connects two distinct endpoints and no two edges have the same endpoints. A simple edge is an edge that is not part of a multiple adjacency. In many cases, graphs are assumed to be simple unless specified otherwise.
2.  A simple path or a simple cycle is a path or cycle that has no repeated vertices (and no repeated edges).
sink
A sink, in a directed graph, is a vertex with no outgoing edges.
size
The size of a graph G is the number of its edges, |E(G)|.[7] The variable m is often used for this quantity. See also order, the number of vertices.
source
A source, in a directed graph, is a vertex with no incoming edges.
space
In algebraic graph theory, several vector spaces over the binary field may be associated with a graph. Each has sets of edges or vertices for its vectors, and symmetric difference of sets as its vector sum operation. The edge space is the space of all sets of edges, and the vertex space is the space of all sets of vertices. The cut space is a subspace of the edge space that has the cut-sets of the graph as its elements. The cycle space has the Eulerian spanning subgraphs as its elements.
spanner
A spanner is a (usually sparse) graph whose shortest path distances approximate those in a dense graph or other metric space. Variations include geometric spanners, graphs whose vertices are points in a geometric space; tree spanners, spanning trees of a graph whose distances approximate the graph distances, and graph spanners, sparse subgraphs of a dense graph whose distances approximate the original graph's distances. A greedy spanner is a graph spanner constructed by a greedy algorithm, generally one that considers all edges from shortest to longest and keeps the ones that are needed to preserve the distance approximation.
spanning
A subgraph is spanning when it includes all of the vertices of the given graph. Important cases include spanning trees, spanning subgraphs that are trees, and perfect matchings, spanning subgraphs that are matchings. A spanning subgraph may also be called a factor, especially (but not only) when it is regular.
sparse
A sparse graph is one that has few edges relative to its number of vertices. In some definitions the same property should also be true for all subgraphs of the given graph.
spectral
spectrum
The spectrum of a graph is the collection of eigenvalues of its adjacency matrix. Spectral graph theory is the branch of graph theory that uses spectra to analyze graphs. See also spectral expansion.
split
1.  A split graph is a graph whose vertices can be partitioned into a clique and an independent set. A related class of graphs, the double split graphs, are used in the proof of the strong perfect graph theorem.
2.  A split of an arbitrary graph is a partition of its vertices into two nonempty subsets, such that the edges spanning this cut form a complete bipartite subgraph. The splits of a graph can be represented by a tree structure called its split decomposition. A split is called a strong split when it is not crossed by any other split. A split is called nontrivial when both of its sides have more than one vertex. A graph is called prime when it has no nontrivial splits.
stable
A stable set is a synonym for an independent set.
star
A star is a tree with one internal vertex; equivalently, it is a complete bipartite graph K1,n for some n ≥ 2. The special case of a star with three leaves is called a claw.
strong
1.  For strong connectivity and strongly connected components of directed graphs, see connected and component. A strong orientation is an orientation that is strongly connected; see orientation.
2.  For the strong perfect graph theorem, see perfect.
3.  A strongly regular graph is a regular graph in which every two adjacent vertices have the same number of shared neighbours and every two non-adjacent vertices have the same number of shared neighbours.
4.  A strongly chordal graph is a chordal graph in which every even cycle of length six or more has an odd chord.
subforest
A subgraph of a forest.
subgraph
A subgraph of a graph G is another graph formed from a subset of the vertices and edges of G. The vertex subset must include all endpoints of the edge subset, but may also include additional vertices. A spanning subgraph is one that includes all vertices of the graph; an induced subgraph is one that includes all the edges whose endpoints belong to the vertex subset.
subtree
A subtree is a connected subgraph of a tree. Sometimes, for rooted trees, subtrees are defined to be a special type of connected subgraph, formed by all vertices and edges reachable from a chosen vertex.
superconcentrator
A superconcentrator is a graph with two designated and equal-sized subsets of vertices I and O, such that for every two equal-sized subsets S of I and T O there exists a family of disjoint paths connecting every vertex in S to a vertex in T. Some sources require in addition that a superconcentrator be a directed acyclic graph, with I as its sources and O as its sinks.
supergraph
A graph formed by adding vertices, edges, or both to a given graph. If H is a subgraph of G, then G is a supergraph of H.

T

theta
1.  A theta graph is the union of three internally disjoint (simple) paths that have the same two distinct end vertices.[8]
2.  The theta graph of a collection of points in the Euclidean plane is constructed by constructing a system of cones surrounding each point and adding one edge per cone, to the point whose projection onto a central ray of the cone is smallest.
3.  The Lovász number or Lovász theta function of a graph is a graph invariant related to the clique number and chromatic number that can be computed in polynomial time by semidefinite programming.
topological
1.  A topological graph is a representation of the vertices and edges of a graph by points and curves in the plane (not necessarily avoiding crossings).
2.  Topological graph theory is the study of graph embeddings.
3.  Topological sorting is the algorithmic problem of arranging a directed acyclic graph into a topological order, a vertex sequence such that each edge goes from an earlier vertex to a later vertex in the sequence.
totally disconnected
Synonym for edgeless.
tour
A closed trail, a walk that starts and ends at the same vertex and has no repeated edges. Euler tours are tours that use all of the graph edges; see Eulerian.
tournament
A tournament is an orientation of a complete graph; that is, it is a directed graph such that every two vertices are connected by exactly one directed edge (going in only one of the two directions between the two vertices).
traceable
A traceable graph is a graph that contains a Hamiltonian path.
trail
A walk without repeated edges.
transitive
Having to do with the transitive property. The transitive closure of a given directed graph is a graph on the same vertex set that has an edge from one vertex to another whenever the original graph has a path connecting the same two vertices. A transitive reduction of a graph is a minimal graph having the same transitive closure; directed acyclc graphs have a unique transitive reduction. A transitive orientation is an orientation of a graph that is its own transitive closure; it exists only for comparability graphs.
transpose
The transpose graph of a given directed graph is a graph on the same vertices, with each edge reversed in direction. It may also be called the converse or reverse of the graph.
tree
1.  A tree is an undirected graph that is both connected and acyclic, or a directed graph in which there exists a unique walk from one vertex (the root of the tree) to all remaining vertices.
2.  A k-tree is a graph formed by gluing (k + 1)-cliques together on shared k-cliques. A tree in the ordinary sense is a 1-tree according to this definition.
tree decomposition
A tree decomposition of a graph G is a tree whose nodes are labeled with sets of vertices of G; these sets are called bags. For each vertex v, the bags that contain v must induce a subtree of the tree, and for each edge uv there must exist a bag that contains both u and v. The width of a tree decomposition is one less than the maximum number of vertices in any of its bags; the treewidth of G is the minimum width of any tree decomposition of G.
treewidth
The treewidth of a graph G is the minimum width of a tree decomposition of G. It can also be defined in terms of the clique number of a chordal completion of G, the order of a haven of G, or the order of a bramble of G.
triangle
A cycle of length three in a graph. A triangle-free graph is an undirected graph that does not have any triangle subgraphs.
Turán
1.  Pál Turán
2.  A Turán graph is a balanced complete multipartite graph.
3.  Turán's theorem states that Turán graphs have the maximum number of edges among all clique-free graphs of a given order.
4.  Turán's brick factory problem asks for the minimum number of crossings in a drawing of a complete bipartite graph.

U

undirected
An undirected graph is a graph in which the two endpoints of each edge are not distinguished from each other. See also directed and mixed. In a mixed graph, an undirected edge is again one in which the endpoints are not distinguished from each other.
uniform
A hypergraph is k-uniform when all its edges have k endpoints, and uniform when it is k-uniform for some k. For instance, ordinary graphs are the same as 2-uniform hypergraphs.
universal
1.  A universal graph is a graph that contains as subgraphs all graphs in a given family of graphs, or all graphs of a given size or order within a given family of graphs.
2.  A universal vertex (also called a dominating vertex) is a vertex that is adjacent to every other vertex in the graph. For instance, wheel graphs and connected threshold graphs always have a universal vertex.

V

V
See vertex set.
valency
Synonym for degree.
vertex
A vertex (plural vertices) is (together with edges) one of the two basic units out of which graphs are constructed. Vertices of graphs are often considered to be atomic objects, with no internal structure.
vertex set
The set of vertices of a given graph G, sometimes denoted by V(G).
vertices
See vertex.
Vizing
1.  Vadim G. Vizing
2.  Vizing's theorem that the chromatic index is at most one more than the maximum degree.
3.  Vizing's conjecture on the domination number of Cartesian products of graphs.

W

W
The letter W is used in notation for wheel graphs and windmill graphs. The notation is not standardized.
Wagner
1.  Klaus Wagner
2.  The Wagner graph, an eight-vertex Möbius ladder.
3.  Wagner's theorem characterizing planar graphs by their forbidden minors.
4.  Wagner's theorem characterizing the K5-minor-free graphs.
walk
A walk is an alternating sequence of vertices and edges, starting and ending at a vertex, in which each edge is adjacent in the sequence to its two endpoints. In a directed graph the ordering of the endpoints of each edge in the sequence must be consistent with the direction of the edge. Some sources call walks paths, while others reserve the term "path" for a simple path (a walk without repeated vertices or edges). Walks are also sometimes called chains.[9] A walk is open if its starts and ends at two different vertices, and closed if it starts and ends at the same vertex. A closed walk may also be called a cycle. Alternatively, the word "cycle" may be reserved for a simple closed walk (one without repeated vertices or edges except for the repetition of the starting and final vertex). A walk without repeated edges (but with vertex repetition allowed) may be called a trail and a closed trail may be called a tour. In the context of ear decomposition, a walk that can have the same starting and ending vertex but otherwise avoids any repeated vertices may be called an ear.

weight
weighted
A weight is a numerical value, assigned as a label to a vertex or edge of a graph. A weighted graph is a graph whose vertices or edges have been assigned weights; more specifically, a vertex-weighted graph has weights on its vertices and an edge-weighted graph has weights on its edges. The weight of a subgraph is the sum of the weights of the vertices or edges within that subgraph.
wheel
A wheel graph is a graph formed by adding a universal vertex to a simple cycle.
width
1.  A synonym for degeneracy.
2.  For other graph invariants known as width, see bandwidth, branchwidth, clique-width, pathwidth, and treewidth.
3.  The width of a tree decomposition or path decomposition is one less than the maximum size of one of its bags, and may be used to define treewidth and pathwidth.
windmill
A windmill graph is the union of a collection of cliques, all of the same order as each other, with one shared vertex belonging to all the cliques and all other vertices and edges distinct.

See also

References

  1. Farber, M.; Hahn, G.; Hell, P.; Miller, D. J. (1986), "Concerning the achromatic number of graphs", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B 40 (1): 21–39, doi:10.1016/0095-8956(86)90062-6.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Cormen, Thomas H.; Leiserson, Charles E.; Rivest, Ronald L.; Stein, Clifford (2001), "B.4 Graphs", Introduction to Algorithms (2 ed.), MIT Press and McGraw-Hill, pp. 1080–1084.
  3. Grünbaum, B. (1973), "Acyclic colorings of planar graphs", Israel Journal of Mathematics 14: 390–408, doi:10.1007/BF02764716.
  4. Cormen et al. (2001), p. 529.
  5. Brandstädt, Andreas; Le, Van Bang; Spinrad, Jeremy (1999), "Chapter 7: Forbidden Subgraph", Graph Classes: A Survey, SIAM Monographs on Discrete Mathematics and Applications, pp. 105–121, ISBN 0-89871-432-X
  6. Mitchem, John (1969), "Hypo-properties in graphs", The Many Facets of Graph Theory (Proc. Conf., Western Mich. Univ., Kalamazoo, Mich., 1968), Springer, pp. 223–230, doi:10.1007/BFb0060121, MR 0253932.
  7. Harris, John M. (2000). Combinatorics and Graph Theory. New York: Springer-Verlag. p. 5. ISBN 0-387-98736-3.
  8. Bondy, J. A. (1972), "The "graph theory" of the Greek alphabet", Graph theory and applications (Proc. Conf., Western Michigan Univ., Kalamazoo, Mich., 1972; dedicated to the memory of J. W. T. Youngs), Lecture Notes in Mathematics 303, Springer, pp. 43–54, doi:10.1007/BFb0067356, MR 0335362
  9. Encyclopedia Britannica online
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