The Schläfli graph may also be constructed from the system of eight-dimensional vectors
(1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0),
(1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1), and
(−1/2, −1/2, 1/2, 1/2, 1/2, 1/2, 1/2, 1/2),
and the 24 other vectors obtained by permuting the first six coordinates of these three vectors.
These 27 vectors correspond to the vertices of the Schläfli graph; two vertices are adjacent if and only if the corresponding two vectors have 1 as their inner product.[2]
Alternately, this graph can be seen as the complement of the collinearity graph of the generalized quadrangle GQ(2, 4).
Subgraphs and neighborhoods
The neighborhood of any vertex in the Schläfli graph forms a 16-vertex subgraph in which each vertex has 10 neighbors (the numbers 16 and 10 coming from the parameters of the Schläfli graph as a strongly regular graph). These subgraphs are all isomorphic to the complement graph of the Clebsch graph.[1][3] Since the Clebsch graph is triangle-free, the Schläfli graph is claw-free. It plays an important role in the structure theory for claw-free graphs by Chudnovsky & Seymour (2005).
Any two skew lines of these 27 belong to a unique Schläfli double sixconfiguration, a set of 12 lines whose intersection graph is a crown graph in which the two lines have disjoint neighborhoods. Correspondingly, in the Schläfli graph, each edge uv belongs uniquely to a subgraph in the form of a Cartesian product of complete graphsK6K2 in such a way that u and v belong to different K6 subgraphs of the product. The Schläfli graph has a total of 36 subgraphs of this form, one of which consists of the zero-one vectors in the eight-dimensional representation described above.[2]
^Cameron & van Lint (1991). Note that Cameron and van Lint use an alternative definition of these graphs in which both the Schläfli graph and the Clebsch graph are complemented from their definitions here.
Cameron, Peter Jephson; van Lint, Jacobus Hendricus (1991), Designs, graphs, codes and their links, London Mathematical Society student texts, vol. 22, Cambridge University Press, p. 35, ISBN978-0-521-41325-1.