Observations on the Lovász θ-Function, Graph Capacity, Eigenvalues, and Strong Products †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- A known upper bound on the Lovász -function of a regular graph is expressed in terms of the smallest eigenvalue of its adjacency matrix [6]. A key result in this work provides a lower bound on the Lovász -function of a regular graph, which is expressed in terms of the second-largest eigenvalue of its adjacency matrix. New sufficient conditions for equalities in these bounds are also obtained (Proposition 1).
- (2)
- A simple and closed-form expression of the Lovász -function is derived for all strongly regular graphs (Corollary 1).
- (3)
- Eigenvalue inequalities are derived, which relate the smallest and second-largest eigenvalues of a regular graph. They hold with equality if and only if the graph is strongly regular (Corollaries 2 and 3).
- (4)
- The Shannon capacity of several strongly regular graphs is determined (Section 3.5).
- (5)
- Bounds on parameters of regular graphs, and in particular of Ramanujan graphs, are derived (Corollaries 4–6).
- (6)
- Bounds on the smallest and the second-largest eigenvalues of strong products of regular graphs are derived, which are expressed in terms of calculable parameters of its factors (Proposition 2).
- (7)
- A new lower bound on the second-largest eigenvalue of a k-fold strong power of a regular graph is compared to the Alon–Boppana bound. Under a certain condition, the former bound shows an improvement in its exponential growth rate as a function of k (Section 3.3).
- (8)
- Every non-complete and non-empty connected regular graph, whose Lovász -function is below a certain value, is proved to have the property that almost all its strong powers are highly non-Ramanujan (Proposition 3).
- (9)
- Lower bounds on the chromatic number of strong products of graphs are expressed in terms of the order and Lovász -function of each factor (Proposition 4). Their utility is exemplified, while also leading to exact chromatic numbers in some cases.
2. Preliminaries
- (a)
- denotes the complete graph with vertices, where every pair of distinct vertices are adjacent; hence, is an empty graph with a single vertex.
- (b)
- denotes the complete bipartite graph, which is a bipartite graph consisting of a vertex set that is a disjoint union of two finite sets and of cardinalities n and m, respectively, and a set of edges that are all the possible connections of a vertex in and a vertex in .
- (c)
- denotes an -length path with , which is a graph with n vertices that forms a path of length ; in particular, .
- (d)
- denotes an n-length cycle, which is a graph with vertices that forms a cycle of length n.
- (e)
- denotes the Kneser graph with integers . It has vertices, represented by all r-subsets of . Two vertices are adjacent in that graph if they are represented by disjoint r-subsets. The graph , provided that it has more than one vertex, is a connected graph if and only if either or .
- (a)
- The complete d-regular graph , with , whose eigenvalues are equal to d with multiplicity 1, and with multiplicity d;
- (b)
- The complete bipartite graph , with , is a d-regular graph whose two nonzero eigenvalues are (each of multiplicity 1), and its other eigenvalues are zeros.
- (c)
- The Petersen graph, which is isomorphic to the Kneser graph , is a Ramanujan graph since it is 3-regular with the distinct eigenvalues 3, , and .
- Every pair of adjacent vertices have exactly common neighbors;
- Every pair of distinct and non-adjacent vertices have exactly common neighbors.
- (a)
- The complement of a strongly regular graph is also strongly regular. More explicitly, the complement of is .
- (b)
- The four parameters of a strongly regular graph satisfy the relation
- (c)
- A strongly regular graph has at most three distinct eigenvalues. If it is connected, then (multiplicity 1), and the other two distinct eigenvalues are
- (d)
- A connected regular graph with exactly three distinct eigenvalues is strongly regular.
- (e)
- A strongly regular graph , with , is a connected graph whose diameter is equal to 2. This holds since two non-adjacent vertices have common neighbors, so the distance between any pair of non-adjacent vertices is equal to 2. This can be also explained by spectral graph theory since the diameter of a connected graph is strictly smaller than the number of its distinct eigenvalues (see Theorem 4.4.1 of [40]). In light of that, the above claim about the diameter holds for all graphs that are connected and strongly regular since these graphs only have three distinct eigenvalues.
- (f)
- If , the strongly regular graph is disconnected, and it is a disjoint union of equal-sized complete graphs (i.e., a disjoint union of cliques of the same size). A disjoint union of an arbitrary number of equal-sized complete graphs, , has the parameters . In that case, (see (10)), so the largest and second-largest eigenvalues coincide (by (11), that common eigenvalue has multiplicity in the graph spectrum). A strongly regular graph is called primitive if both and its complement are connected graphs. Otherwise, is called imprimitive. An imprimitive graph is, therefore, either a disjoint union of equal-sized complete graphs or its complement, which is a non-empty complete multipartite graph. A strongly regular graph is imprimitive if and only if 0 or is an eigenvalue of .
- (g)
- Let be a primitive strongly regular graph with the largest eigenvalue d (multiplicity 1), second-largest eigenvalue (multiplicity ), and smallest eigenvalue (multiplicity ). By (3) and (4), the complement is a primitive strongly regular graph, having the largest eigenvalue (multiplicity 1), second-largest eigenvalue (multiplicity ), and smallest eigenvalue (multiplicity ). Each of these primitive strongly regular graphs has three distinct eigenvalues.
- (a)
- and ,
- (b)
- and ,
- (c)
- and .
- (a)
- (b)
- Theorem 7 of [6]: The Lovász -function factorizes for the strong product of graphs, i.e.,
- (c)
- (d)
- (e)
- Two simple observations relating the Lovász -functions of a graph and its subgraphs:
- If is a spanning subgraph of a graph , then .
- If is an induced subgraph of a graph , then .
- (f)
- Theorem 2 of [14]: Although unrelated to the analysis in this paper, another interesting property of the Lovász -function is given by the identity
3. Theorems, Discussions and Examples
3.1. Bounds on Lovász -Function, and an Exact Result for Strongly Regular Graphs
- (a)
- It forms a counterpart of a bound by Lovász (Theorem 9 of [6]), providing a lower bound on and an upper bound on that are both expressed in terms of the second-largest eigenvalue of the adjacency matrix of .
- (b)
- It asserts that these two pairs of upper and lower bounds on and are tight for the family of strongly regular graphs. This gives a simple closed-form expression of the Lovász -function of a strongly regular graph (and the complement graph) as a function of its four parameters.
- (c)
- Further sufficient conditions for the tightness of these bounds are provided.
- (a)
- (b)
- Let be the family of graphs such that is both vertex-transitive and edge-transitive;
- Let be the family of regular and edge-transitive graphs;
- Let be the family of graphs such that is regular and edge-transitive;
- Let be the family of graphs that are both vertex-transitive and edge-transitive;
- Let be the family of the strongly regular graphs.
- (a)
- The Cameron graph is a strongly regular graph (see Section 10.54 of [60]). Its complement is vertex-transitive (hence, regular), but not edge-transitive. This shows that , so also .
- (b)
- The complement of the Cameron graph is a strongly regular graph ; it is vertex-transitive (hence, regular), but not edge-transitive. This shows that , so also .
- (c)
- The Foster graph is 3-regular on 90 vertices (see page 305 of [60]), which is vertex-transitive and edge-transitive, but it is not strongly regular. This shows that , so also .
- (d)
- The complement of the Foster graph is an 86-regular graph on 90 vertices, whose complement (i.e., the Foster graph) is vertex-transitive and edge-transitive, but it is not strongly regular. This shows that , so also .
3.2. Eigenvalue Inequalities, Strongly Regular Graphs, and Ramanujan Graphs
- (a)
- Derivation of inequalities that relate the second-largest and smallest eigenvalues of a regular graph. These inequalities are proved to hold with equality if and only if the graph is strongly regular.
- (b)
- Derivation of bounds on parameters of Ramanujan graphs.
- (c)
- A more general result is presented for a sequence of regular graphs whose degrees scale sub-linearly with the orders of these graphs, and their orders tend to infinity.
- (a)
- (b)
- If is a strongly regular graph, then the number of distinct values in the sequence is either 2 or 3, and
- it is equal to 2 if the multiplicities of the second-largest and smallest eigenvalues of are identical in the subsequence ;
- it is otherwise equal to 3.
- (c)
- If is self-complementary, then
- (d)
- ( is edge transitive) ⇒ (every edge in is contained in the same number of triangles) ⇔ (every pair of adjacent vertices in has the same number of common neighbors);
- ( is edge transitive) ⇒ (for every edge , the same number of vertices are not adjacent in to either u or v) ⇔ (every pair of non-adjacent vertices in has the same number of common neighbors);
- is regular (by assumption);
- (a)
- A connected, edge-transitive and strongly regular graph is vertex-transitive (Lemma 1.3 of [71]).
- (b)
- A vertex-transitive and edge-transitive graph containing a regular clique is strongly regular (Corollary 2.4 of [72]). (A clique is called regular if every vertex not in is adjacent to the same positive number of vertices in ).
3.3. Bounds on Eigenvalues of Strong Products of Regular Graphs
- (1)
- (2)
- The Witsenhausen rate [13] in the zero-error source coding problem, with perfect side information at the receiver, is expressed in a dual form to (22), where the independence numbers of k-fold strong powers of a graph (with ) are replaced by their chromatic numbers, and the supremum over k is replaced by an infimum (see Section 3 of [3]);
- (3)
- There exists a polynomial-time algorithm that finds the unique prime factorization of any connected graph under the operation of strong graph multiplication [12].
- (a)
- Unless all (with ) are complete graphs, then
- (b)
- Unless all (with ) are empty graphs, then
3.4. Lower Bounds on the Chromatic Numbers of Strong Products
- (a)
- Let be k simple graphs, for , and . Then,
- (b)
- Let be regular graphs, where is -regular of order for all . Then,and inequality (68) holds with equality if each is either edge-transitive or strongly regular.
- (c)
- If, for all , is -regular, and it is either edge-transitive or strongly regular, thenwhereis the valency of the regular graph , and is its smallest eigenvalue.
- (d)
- Let be regular graphs, where is -regular of order for all .
- (1)
- If, for all , the graph is either vertex-transitive or strongly regular, then the lower bound on in the right-hand side of (65) is larger than or equal to the lower bound .
- (2)
- If, for all , the graph is either (i) both vertex-transitive and edge-transitive, or (ii) strongly regular, then the lower bound on in the right-hand side of (68) is larger than or equal to the lower bound .
- (e)
- Let, for all , the graph be -regular on vertices, and suppose that it is either edge-transitive or strongly regular. Then,
- (f)
- Let, for all , be a self-complementary graph on vertices that is either vertex-transitive or strongly regular. Let be the order of . Then,
3.5. The Shannon Capacity of Strongly Regular Graphs
4. Proofs
4.1. Proofs for Section 3.1
4.1.1. Proof of Proposition 1
4.1.2. Proof of Corollary 1
4.2. Proofs for Section 3.2
4.2.1. Proof of Corollary 2
- (a)
- If the d-regular graph is connected, then . By assumption, is also non-complete and non-empty graph, so . The connected regular graph thus has exactly three distinct eigenvalues, so it is strongly regular.
- (b)
- If the d-regular graph is disconnected, then . If, by assumption, inequality (30) holds with equality, then . This means that is a disjoint union of equal-sized complete graphs , so it is an imprimitive strongly regular graph (i.e., there are no common neighbors of any pair of non-adjacent vertices in ).
4.2.2. Proof of Corollary 3
- (1)
- For a d-regular graph on n vertices, , and . Substituting these eigenvalues into (32) gives that ( is non-complete, so ).
- (2)
- The graph and its complement are both strongly regular, so each one of them has at most three distinct eigenvalues.
- (3)
- For a strongly regular graph, by Item (a), , and if either (i) and , or (ii) and .
- (4)
- By assumption, is a strongly regular graph, which implies that so is . Due to their regularity, , and with equalities, respectively, if and only if or are disconnected graphs. The sequence gets an additional (third) distinct value if and only if the multiplicities of the smallest and the second-largest eigenvalues of in the subsequence are distinct. Indeed, in the latter case, only one of the following two options is possible: (iii) and , or (iv) and . This holds since, by (4), the multiplicity of the second-largest eigenvalue of is equal to the multiplicity of the smallest eigenvalue of , and similarly, the multiplicity of the smallest eigenvalue of is equal to the multiplicity of the second-largest eigenvalue of . It therefore follows that the third distinct value (as above) is attained by the sequence a number of times that is equal to the absolute value of the difference between the multiplicities of the second-largest and the smallest eigenvalues of in the subsequence (provided that the latter two multiplicities are distinct).
4.2.3. Proof of Corollary 4
4.2.4. Proof of Corollary 5
4.2.5. Proof of Corollary 6
4.3. Proofs for Section 3.3
4.3.1. Proof of Proposition 2
- (a)
- By the leftmost inequality in (24), unless ,Indeed, equality (161) holds since the cardinality of a Cartesian product of finite sets is equal to the product of the cardinalities of each set; equality (162) can be justified by first verifying the special case of a strong product of two regular graphs, and then proceeding by a mathematical induction on k. Finally, equality (163) holds by (17) (see Theorem 7 of [6]). Combining the bound in (160) with equalities (161)–(163) givesUnless all (with ) are complete graphs, the left-hand side of (164) is strictly larger than 1, and then rearrangement of the terms in (164) gives the lower bound on in (52). Next, the possible loosening of the lower bound in the right-hand side of (52) to the lower bound in the right-hand side of (53) holds by (19) (see Theorem 9 of [6]). Inequality (53) holds with equality if each regular factor is either edge-transitive (by Theorem 9 of [6]) or strongly regular (by Item (a) of Proposition 1).
- (b)
- Unless all (with ) are empty graphs, the denominator in the right-hand side of (167) is strictly positive. This gives (54) after rearrangement of terms. Finally, the transition from (54) to (55) is justified ifAs above (the end of the proof of Item (a)), the condition in (168) holds if the regular graph is either edge-transitive or strongly regular.
4.3.2. Proof of Corollary 7
4.3.3. Proof of Proposition 3
4.4. Proofs for Section 3.4
4.4.1. Proof of Proposition 4
- (a)
- Let be k simple, finite and undirected graphs, for , and let . We provide two alternative simple proofs of (65).
- (b)
- (c)
- By (182), with ,Suppose that, for all , is -regular, and it is also either edge-transitive or strongly regular. By Item (a) in Proposition 1, for all ,It should be noted, in regard to (191), that even if all ’s are regular and edge-transitive graphs, their strong product is not necessarily edge-transitive. In fact, is not edge-transitive, unless all the k factors are complete graphs (see Theorem 3.1 of [28]). For this reason, (191) does not hold in general with equality (see Theorem 9 of [6]). Finally, combing (190) and (191) gives inequality (69).
- (d)
- Let be regular graphs, where is -regular on vertices for all . Then, under the assumptions of Item (d),
- (1)
- (2)
- (e)
- By (66),Let, for all , the graph be -regular on vertices, and suppose that it is either edge-transitive or strongly regular. Then, by Item (a) of Proposition 1,
- (f)
- By the assumption that are self-complementary,Furthermore, by the assumption that for all , is a graph on vertices that is either vertex-transitive or strongly regular,
4.4.2. Proof of Corollary 8
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Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Sason, I.
Observations on the Lovász θ-Function, Graph Capacity, Eigenvalues, and Strong Products
Sason I.
Observations on the Lovász θ-Function, Graph Capacity, Eigenvalues, and Strong Products
Sason, Igal.
2023. "Observations on the Lovász θ-Function, Graph Capacity, Eigenvalues, and Strong Products
Sason, I.
(2023). Observations on the Lovász θ-Function, Graph Capacity, Eigenvalues, and Strong Products