Permanental roots and the star degree of a graph (Q802573): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 16:04, 14 June 2024

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Permanental roots and the star degree of a graph
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    Permanental roots and the star degree of a graph (English)
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    1985
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    Let A be the adjacency matrix of a graph G and D a diagonal matrix whose entries are the degrees of the vertices of G. Let \(B=A+D\). Define a pendant star of G as a maximal subgraph formed by pendant edges all incident with the same vertex and call the number of pendant edges of the star S the degree of S. The star degree of G is the sum of the degrees of all pendant stars (or 0 if G has none). The main result is that the star degree of G is equal to the multiplicity of root 1 of per(xI-B). For bipartite graphs, the same statement holds with \(L=D-A\) instead of B.
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    permanental roots
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    adjacency matrix
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    pendant star
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