General properties of some families of graphs defined by systems of equations
DOI10.1002/jgt.1024zbMath0990.05080OpenAlexW4246611826MaRDI QIDQ2757094
Andrew J. Woldar, Felix Lazebnik
Publication date: 21 November 2001
Published in: Journal of Graph Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/jgt.1024
coveringRamsey numbersextremal problemscoloringsedge-decompositioninfinite families of graphsembedded spectra
Extremal problems in graph theory (05C35) Planar graphs; geometric and topological aspects of graph theory (05C10) Graphs and linear algebra (matrices, eigenvalues, etc.) (05C50) Edge subsets with special properties (factorization, matching, partitioning, covering and packing, etc.) (05C70) Coloring of graphs and hypergraphs (05C15) Generalized Ramsey theory (05C55)
Related Items
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- On a class of degenerate extremal graph problems
- Ramanujan graphs
- Decompositions of regular bipartite graphs
- Extremal graphs with no \(C^{4,}\)s, \(C^{6,}\)s, or \(C^{10,}\)s
- On multicolor Ramsey numbers for complete bipartite graphs
- Polarities and \(2k\)-cycle-free graphs
- Properties of certain families of \(2k\)-cycle-free graphs
- New examples of graphs without small cycles and of large size
- New constructions of bipartite graphs on \(m\), \(n\) vertices with many edges and without small cycles
- Graphs without quadrilaterals
- Compactness results in extremal graph theory
- Cycles of even length in graphs
- New lower bounds on the multicolor Ramsey numbers \(r_k(C_4)\)
- Explicit construction of graphs with an arbitrary large girth and of large size
- Graphs of prescribed girth and bi-degree
- On the number of edges of quadrilateral-free graphs
- A characterization of the components of the graphs \(D(k,q)\)
- A new series of dense graphs of high girth
- On the structure of extremal graphs of high girth
- Minimal Regular Graphs of Girths Eight and Twelve
- On Graphs that do not Contain a Thomsen Graph
- Regular Graphs with Given Girth and Restricted Circuits