Voltage graph
In graph theory, a voltage graph is a directed graph whose edges are labelled invertibly by elements of a group. It is formally identical to a gain graph, but it is generally used in topological graph theory as a concise way to specify another graph called the derived graph of the voltage graph.
Typical choices of the groups used for voltage graphs include the two-element group , free groups, d-dimensional integer lattices , and finite cyclic groups for n > 2. When is a cyclic group, the voltage graph may be called a cyclic-voltage graph.
Definition
Formal definition of a -voltage graph, for a given group :- Begin with a digraph G.
- A -voltage on an arc of G is a label of the arc by an element. For instance, in the case where, the label is a number i .
- A -voltage assignment is a function that labels each arc of G with a Π-voltage.
- A -voltage graph is a pair such that G is a digraph and α is a voltage assignment.
- The voltage group of a voltage graph is the group from which the voltages are assigned.
The derived graph
The derived graph of a voltage graph is the graph whose vertex set is and whose edge set is, where the endpoints of an edge such that e has tail v and head w are and.Although voltage graphs are defined for digraphs, they may be extended to undirected graphs by replacing each undirected edge by a pair of oppositely ordered directed edges and by requiring that these edges have labels that are inverse to each other in the group structure. In this case, the derived graph will also have the property that its directed edges form pairs of oppositely oriented edges, so the derived graph may itself be interpreted as being an undirected graph.
The derived graph is a covering graph of the given voltage graph. If no edge label of the voltage graph is the identity element, then the group elements associated with the vertices of the derived graph provide a coloring of the derived graph with a number of colors equal to the group order. An important special case is the bipartite double cover, the derived graph of a voltage graph in which all edges are labeled with the non-identity element of a two-element group. Because the order of the group is two, the derived graph in this case is guaranteed to be bipartite.
Polynomial time algorithms are known for determining whether the derived graph of a -voltage graph contains any directed cycles.
Examples
Any Cayley graph of a group, with a given set of generators, may be defined as the derived graph for a -voltage graph having one vertex and self-loops, each labeled with one of the generators in.The Petersen graph is the derived graph for a -voltage graph in the shape of a dumbbell with two vertices and three edges: one edge connecting the two vertices, and one self-loop on each vertex. One self-loop is labeled with 1, the other with 2, and the edge connecting the two vertices is labeled 0. More generally, the same construction allows any generalized Petersen graph GP to be constructed as a derived graph of the same dumbbell graph with labels 1, 0, and k in the group.
The vertices and edges of any periodic tessellation of the plane may be formed as the derived graph of a finite graph, with voltages in.