An algebraic characterization of strong graphs
Pablo Romero

TL;DR
This paper characterizes strong graphs algebraically and proves they are equivalent to Whitney-maximum graphs, confirming a conjecture within certain graph classes.
Contribution
It establishes an algebraic characterization of strong graphs and proves their equivalence to Whitney-maximum graphs, advancing understanding of graph polynomial properties.
Findings
Strong graphs are equivalent to Whitney-maximum graphs.
The paper confirms the 0-element conjecture for specific graph classes.
Provides an algebraic framework linking spanning subgraphs and Whitney polynomials.
Abstract
Let be a connected simple graph on vertices and edges. Denote the number of spanning subgraphs of having precisely edges and not more than connected components. The graph is \emph{strong} if for each pair of integers and and each connected simple graph on vertices and edges. The graph is \emph{Whitney-maximum} if for each connected simple graph on vertices and edges there exists a polynomial with nonnegative coefficients such that , where and stand for the Whitney polynomial of and . In this work it is proved that a graph is strong if and only if it is Whitney-maximum. Consequently, the -element conjecture proposed by Boesch [J.\ Graph Theory 10 (1986), 339--352] is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraph Labeling and Dimension Problems · Advanced Graph Theory Research · Graph theory and applications
