Counterexamples to a conjecture of Dias on eigenvalues of chemical graphs (Q2853191)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6217147
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| English | Counterexamples to a conjecture of Dias on eigenvalues of chemical graphs |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6217147 |
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18 October 2013
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octo-graph
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Counterexamples to a conjecture of Dias on eigenvalues of chemical graphs (English)
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Chemical graphs are simple, connected graphs with maximum degree not greater than three. The limitation on the vertex degree confines the eigenvalues \(\{\lambda_i\}\) of a graph of order \(n\) to the range \(-3\leq\lambda_i\leq3\). The integer nature of the coefficients of the characteristic polynomials implies that, for integers \(p\) that are not squares, the spectrum of a given chemical graph includes either both \(+\sqrt{p}\) and \(-\sqrt{p}\) or neither.NEWLINENEWLINE Chemical graphs with adjacency eigenvalues \(\pm\sqrt{1}\), \(\pm\sqrt{2}\), \(\pm\sqrt{3}\), \(\pm\sqrt{4}\), \(\pm\sqrt{5}\), \(\pm\sqrt{6}\), \(\pm\sqrt{7}\), \(\pm\sqrt{9}\) are all found. The present note proves that at least one chemical graph with eigenvalues \(\pm\sqrt{8}\), called octo-graph, exists for all orders \(n\geq10\). In fact, the eigenvalue pair can be achieved with arbitrarily high multiplicity.
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0.6971191167831421
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