Gosset graph
Gosset graph (321)
(There are 3 rings of 18 vertices, and two vertices coincide in the center of this projection. Edges also coincide with this projection.)
Named afterThorold Gosset
Vertices56
Edges756
Radius3
Diameter3
Girth3
Automorphisms2903040
PropertiesDistance-regular graph
Integral
Vertex-transitive
Polytopal
Table of graphs and parameters

The Gosset graph, named after Thorold Gosset, is a distance-regular graph with 56 vertices and valency 27.[1] It is the 1-skeleton of the 7-dimensional 321 polytope.

Construction

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The Gosset graph can be explicitly constructed as follows: the 56 vertices are the vectors in R8 obtained by permuting the coordinates and possibly taking the opposite of the vector (3,ย 3,ย โˆ’1,ย โˆ’1,ย โˆ’1,ย โˆ’1,ย โˆ’1,ย โˆ’1). Two such vectors are adjacent when their inner product isย 8, or equivalently when their distance is .

An alternative construction is based on the 8-vertex complete graph K8. The vertices of the Gosset graph can be identified with two copies of the set of edges of K8. Two vertices of the Gosset graph that come from different copies are adjacent if they correspond to disjoint edges of K8; two vertices that come from the same copy are adjacent if they correspond to edges that share a single vertex.

Properties

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In the vector representation of the Gosset graph, two vertices are at distance two when their inner product is โˆ’8 and at distance three when their inner product is โˆ’24 (which is only possible if the vectors are each other's opposite). In the representation based on the edges of K8, two vertices of the Gosset graph are at distance three if and only if they correspond to different copies of the same edge of K8. The Gosset graph is distance-regular with diameter three.[2]

The induced subgraph of the neighborhood of any vertex in the Gosset graph is isomorphic to the Schlรคfli graph.[2]

The automorphism group of the Gosset graph is isomorphic to the Coxeter group E7 and hence has order 2903040. The Gosset 321 polytope is a semiregular polytope. Therefore, the automorphism group of the Gosset graph, E7, acts transitively upon its vertices, making it a vertex-transitive graph.

The characteristic polynomial of the Gosset graph is[3]

Therefore, this graph is an integral graph.

References

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  1. ^ Grishukhin, V. P. (2011), "Delone and Voronoฤญ polytopes of the root lattice E7 and the dual lattice E7*", Trudy Matematicheskogo Instituta imeni V. A. Steklova, 275: 68โ€“86, doi:10.1134/S0081543811080049, MRย 2962971, S2CIDย 120405049.
  2. ^ a b Kabanov, V. V.; Makhnev, A. A.; Paduchikh, D. V. (2007), "Characterization of some distance-regular graphs by forbidden subgraphs", Doklady Akademii Nauk, 414 (5): 583โ€“586, doi:10.1134/S1064562407030234, MRย 2451915, S2CIDย 119529234.
  3. ^ Brouwer, A. E.; Riebeek, R. J. (1998), "The spectra of Coxeter graphs", Journal of Algebraic Combinatorics, 8 (1): 15โ€“28, doi:10.1023/A:1008670825910, MRย 1635551.
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๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Graph of a polytope

dodecahedron. The Schlรคfli graph is the edge graph of the 6-dimensional 221 polytope. The Gosset graph is the edge graph of the 7-dimensional 321 polytope. Some

Schlรคfli graph

Schlรคfli graph and its complement. The proof relies on the classification of finite simple groups. Gosset graph โ€“ contains the Schlรคfli graph as an induced

Thorold Gosset

new and more precise definition of the Gosset Series of polytopes has been given by Conway in 2008. Gosset graph Scott Vorthmann with David Richter in

5-demicube

with the Gosset polytopes: 221, 321, and 421. The graph formed by the vertices and edges of the demipenteract is sometimes called the Clebsch graph, though

3 21 polytope

drawn on this projection. The 1-skeleton of the 321 polytope is the Gosset graph. This polytope, along with the 7-simplex, can tessellate 7-dimensional

List of graphs by edges and vertices

the graph is planar and F indicates that the graph is not planar. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Graphs by number of vertices. See also Graph theory

Gossetโ€“Elte figures

bifurcated graph with a central node ringed. Coxeter named these figures as ki,j (or kij) in shorthand and gave credit of their discovery to Gosset and Elte:

4 21 polytope

constructed within the symmetry of the E8 group. It was discovered by Thorold Gosset, published in his 1900 paper. He called it an 8-ic semi-regular figure.