Conference graph


In the mathematical area of graph theory, a conference graph is a strongly regular graph with parameters v, and It is the graph associated with a symmetric conference matrix, and consequently its order v must be 1 and a sum of two squares.
Conference graphs are known to exist for all small values of v allowed by the restrictions, e.g., v = 5, 9, 13, 17, 25, 29, and for all prime powers congruent to 1. However, there are many values of v that are allowed, for which the existence of a conference graph is unknown. The smallest value of v which has no Paley graph but does have a conference graph is v = 45, found in 1978. The next smallest, v = 65, was found over 4 decades later in 2021. As of now, the smallest open case is v = 85.
The eigenvalues of a conference graph need not be integers, unlike those of other strongly regular graphs. If the graph is connected, the eigenvalues are k with multiplicity 1, and two other eigenvalues,
each with multiplicity
The complement of a conference graph is always a conference graph with the same parameters, and in many cases is self-complementary, such as for all the Paley graphs.