Heawood family

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Template:Distinguish In graph theory the term Heawood family refers to either one of the following two related graph families generated via ΔY- and YΔ-transformations:

  • the family of 20 graphs generated from the complete graph K7.
  • the family of 78 graphs generated from K7 and K3,3,1,1.

In either setting the members of the graph family are collectively known as Heawood graphs, as the Heawood graph is a member. This is in analogy to the Petersen family, which too is named after its member the Petersen graph.

The Heawood families are significant in topological graph theory. They contain the smallest known examples of intrinsically knotted graphs,[1] of graphs that are not 4-flat, and of graphs with Colin de Verdière graph invariant μ=6.[2]

The K7-family

The K7-family is generated from the complete graph K7 through repeated application of ΔY- and YΔ-transformations. The family consists of 20 graphs, all of which have 21 edges. The unique smallest member, K7, has seven vertices. The unique largest member, the Heawood graph, has 14 vertices.[1]

Only 14 out of the 20 graphs are intrinsically knotted, all of which are minor minimal with this property. The other six graphs have knotless embeddings.[1] This shows that knotless graphs are not closed under ΔY- and YΔ-transformations.

All members of the K7-family are intrinsically chiral.[3]

The K3,3,1,1-family

The K3,3,1,1-family is generated from the complete multipartite graph K3,3,1,1 through repeated application of ΔY- and YΔ-transformations. The family consists of 58 graphs, all of which have 22 edges. The unique smallest member, K3,3,1,1, has eight vertices. The unique largest member has 14 vertices.[1]

All graphs in this family are intrinsically knotted and are minor minimal with this property.[1]

The {K7,K3,3,1,1}-family

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The Heawood family generated from both K7 and K3,3,1,1 through repeated application of ΔY- and YΔ-transformations is the disjoint union of the K7-family and the K3,3,1,1-family. It consists of 78 graphs.

This graph family has significance in the study of 4-flat graphs, i.e., graphs with the property that every 2-dimensional CW complex built on them can be embedded into 4-space. Hein van der Holst (2006) showed that the graphs in the Heawood family are not 4-flat and have Colin de Verdière graph invariant μ=6. In particular, they are neither planar nor linkless. Van der Holst suggested that they might form the complete list of excluded minors for both the 4-flat graphs and the graphs with μ5.[2]

This conjecture can be further motivated from structural similarities to other topologically defined graphs classes:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Goldberg, N., Mattman, T. W., & Naimi, R. (2014). Many, many more intrinsically knotted graphs. Algebraic & Geometric Topology, 14(3), 1801-1823.
  2. 2.0 2.1 van der Holst, H. (2006). Graphs and obstructions in four dimensions. Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 96(3), 388-404.
  3. Mellor, B., & Wilson, R. (2023). Topological Symmetries of the Heawood family. arXiv preprint arXiv:2311.08573.