- Heawood graph
infobox graph
name = Heawood graph
image_caption =
namesake =Percy John Heawood
vertices = 14
edges = 21
girth = 6
chromatic_number = 2
chromatic_index = 3
properties = Cubic Cage Distance-regular ToroidalIn the mathematical field of
graph theory , the Heawood graph is anundirected graph with 14 vertices and 21 edges. The graph is cubic, and all cycles in the graph have six or more edges. Every smaller cubic graph has shorter cycles, so this graph is the 6-cage, the smallest cubic graph ofgirth 6. It is also theLevi graph of theFano plane , the graph representing incidences between points and lines in that geometry. It is adistance-regular graph ; its group of symmetries is PGL2(7) (Brouwer).There are 24
perfect matching s in the Heawood graph; for each matching, the set of edges not in the matching forms aHamiltonian cycle . For instance, the figure shows the vertices of the graph placed on a cycle, with the internal diagonals of the cycle forming a matching. By subdividing the cycle edges into two matchings, we can partition the Heawood graph into three perfect matchings (that is, 3-color its edges) in eight different ways (Brouwer).The Heawood graph is named after
Percy John Heawood , who in 1890 proved that every subdivision of the torus into polygons can be colored by at most seven colors. The Heawood graph forms a subdivision of the torus with seven mutually-adjacent regions, showing that this bound is tight.The Heawood graph has
crossing number 3, and is the smallest cubic graph with that crossing number OEIS|id=A110507.Torus embedding
The Heawood graph is a
toroidal graph ; that is, it can be embedded without crossings onto atorus . One embedding of this type places its vertices and edges into three-dimensionalEuclidean space as the set of vertices and edges of a nonconvex polyhedron with the topology of a torus, theSzilassi polyhedron .References
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