Wiener–Araya graph
The Wiener–Araya graph is, in graph theory , a graph on 42 vertices with 67 edges. It is hypohamiltonian , which means that
it does not itself have a Hamiltonian cycle but every graph formed by removing a single vertex from it is Hamiltonian . It is also planar .
History
Hypohamiltonian graphs were first studied by Sousselier in Problèmes plaisants et délectables (1963).[ 1]
In 1967, Lindgren built an infinite sequence of hypohamiltonian graphs.[ 2]
He first cited Gaudin, Herz and Rossi,[ 3] then Busacker and Saaty[ 4]
as pioneers on this topic.
From the start, the smallest hypohamiltonian graph is known: the Petersen graph . However, the hunt for the smallest planar hypohamiltonian graph continues. This question was first raised by Václav Chvátal in 1973.[ 5]
The first candidate answer was provided in 1976 by Carsten Thomassen , who exhibited a 105-vertices construction, the 105-Thomassen graph .[ 6]
In 1979, Hatzel improved this result with a planar hypohamiltonian graph on 57 vertices : the Hatzel graph .[ 7]
This bound was lowered in 2007 by the 48-Zamfirescu graph .[ 8]
In 2009, a graph built by Gábor Wiener and Makoto Araya became (with its 42 vertices) the smallest planar hypohamiltonian graph known.[ 9] [ 10]
In their paper, Wiener and Araya conjectured their graph to be optimal arguing that its order (42 ) appears to be the
answer to The Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy , a Douglas Adams novel. However, subsequently, smaller planar hypohamiltonian graphs have been discovered.[ 11]
References
^ Sousselier, R. (1963), Problème no. 29: Le cercle des irascibles , vol. 7, Rev. Franç. Rech. Opérationnelle, pp. 405–406
^ Lindgren, W. F. (1967), "An infinite class of hypohamiltonian graphs", American Mathematical Monthly , 74 (9): 1087–1089, doi :10.2307/2313617 , JSTOR 2313617 , MR 0224501
^ Gaudin, T.; Herz, P.; Rossi (1964), "Solution du problème No. 29", Rev. Franç. Rech. Opérationnelle (in French), 8 : 214–218
^ Busacker, R. G.; Saaty, T. L. (1965), Finite Graphs and Networks
^ Chvátal, V. (1973), "Flip-flops in hypo-Hamiltonian graphs", Canadian Mathematical Bulletin , 16 : 33–41, doi :10.4153/cmb-1973-008-9 , MR 0371722
^ Thomassen, Carsten (1976), "Planar and infinite hypohamiltonian and hypotraceable graphs", Discrete Mathematics , 14 (4): 377–389, doi :10.1016/0012-365x(76)90071-6 , MR 0422086
^ Hatzel, Wolfgang (1979), "Ein planarer hypohamiltonscher Graph mit 57 Knoten", Mathematische Annalen (in German), 243 (3): 213–216, doi :10.1007/BF01424541 , MR 0548801 , S2CID 121794449
^ Zamfirescu, Carol T.; Zamfirescu, Tudor I. (2007), "A planar hypohamiltonian graph with 48 vertices", Journal of Graph Theory , 55 (4): 338–342, doi :10.1002/jgt.20241 , MR 2336805 , S2CID 260477281
^ Wiener, Gábor; Araya, Makoto (April 20, 2009), The ultimate question , arXiv :0904.3012 , Bibcode :2009arXiv0904.3012W .
^ Wiener, Gábor; Araya, Makoto (2011), "On planar hypohamiltonian graphs", Journal of Graph Theory , 67 (1): 55–68, doi :10.1002/jgt.20513 , MR 2809563 , S2CID 5340663 .
^ Jooyandeh, Mohammadreza; McKay, Brendan D. ; Östergård, Patric R. J.; Pettersson, Ville H.; Zamfirescu, Carol T. (2017), "Planar hypohamiltonian graphs on 40 vertices", Journal of Graph Theory , 84 (2): 121–133, arXiv :1302.2698 , doi :10.1002/jgt.22015 , MR 3601121 , S2CID 5535167
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