A core problem in spectral graph theory is the characterization of graphs with bounded adjacency eigenvalues. We define G(λ) to be the set of all graphs with smallest adjacency eigenvalue at least -λ. It is well-known that two infinite families of graphs namely line graphs and generalized line graphs have adjacency values at least -2, i.e. they lie in G(2). In 1976, Cameron, Goethals, Seidel, and Shult gave a complete characterization of graphs in G(2). Recently, Jiang and Polyanskii proved that the number of connected graphs in G(λ)\G(2) is finite iff λ ∈ (2, λ*) where λ* ≈ 2.0198008871. This tells us that λ* is the smallest λ > 2 such that G(λ)\G(2) contains infinitely many connected graphs. We will give a complete characterization of graphs in G(λ*)\G(2). In particular, we will discuss the structure of large graphs in G(λ*)\G(2). This talk is based on joint work with Dr. Zilin Jiang in arxiv 2404.13136.*
Discrete Math Seminar
Friday, October 4
10:00am MST/AZ
WXLR A107
Hricha Acharya
Graduate student
School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences
Arizona State University