In mathematics, Johnson graphs are a special class of undirected graphs defined from systems of sets. The vertices of the Johnson graph are the -element subsets of an -element set; two vertices are adjacent when the intersection of the two vertices (subsets) contains -elements.[1] Both Johnson graphs and the closely related Johnson scheme are named after Selmer M. Johnson.
It is also known that the Johnson graph is -vertex-connected.[4]
forms the graph of vertices and edges of an (n − 1)-dimensional polytope, called a hypersimplex.[5]
Any maximal clique is either of the form for a -element subset and , or of the form for a -element set for , or of the form in the edge case .[6]
The clique number of is given by an expression in terms of its least and greatest eigenvalues: , or, by the above explicit description of maximal cliques,
Each Johnson graph is locally grid, meaning that the induced subgraph of the neighbors of any vertex is a rook's graph. More precisely, in the Johnson graph , each neighborhood is a rook's graph.[8]
As a consequence of being distance-transitive, is also distance-regular. Letting denote its diameter, the intersection array of is given by
where:
It turns out that unless is , its intersection array is not shared with any other distinct distance-regular graph; the intersection array of is shared with three other distance-regular graphs that are not Johnson graphs.[1]
The Johnson graph is closely related to the Johnson scheme, an association scheme in which each pair of k-element sets is associated with a number, half the size of the symmetric difference of the two sets.[11] The Johnson graph has an edge for every pair of sets at distance one in the association scheme, and the distances in the association scheme are exactly the shortest path distances in the Johnson graph.[12]
The Johnson scheme is also related to another family of distance-transitive graphs, the odd graphs, whose vertices are -element subsets of an -element set and whose edges correspond to disjoint pairs of subsets.[11]
The vertex-expansion properties of Johnson graphs, as well as the structure of the corresponding extremal sets of vertices of a given size, are not fully understood. However, an asymptotically tight lower bound on expansion of large sets of vertices was recently obtained.[13]
In general, determining the chromatic number of a Johnson graph is an open problem.[14]
^Ramras, Mark; Donovan, Elizabeth (2011), "The automorphism group of a Johnson graph", SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics, 25 (1): 267–270, doi:10.1137/090765596
^Cohen, Arjeh M. (1990), "Local recognition of graphs, buildings, and related geometries"(PDF), in Kantor, William M.; Liebler, Robert A.; Payne, Stanley E.; Shult, Ernest E. (eds.), Finite Geometries, Buildings, and Related Topics: Papers from the Conference on Buildings and Related Geometries held in Pingree Park, Colorado, July 17–23, 1988, Oxford Science Publications, Oxford University Press, pp. 85–94, MR1072157; see in particular pp. 89–90
^ abBrouwer, Andries E. (1989), Distance-Regular Graphs, Cohen, Arjeh M., Neumaier, Arnold., Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, ISBN9783642743436, OCLC851840609
^ abCameron, Peter J. (1999), Permutation Groups, London Mathematical Society Student Texts, vol. 45, Cambridge University Press, p. 95, ISBN9780521653787.
^The explicit identification of graphs with association schemes, in this way, can be seen in Bose, R. C. (1963), "Strongly regular graphs, partial geometries and partially balanced designs", Pacific Journal of Mathematics, 13 (2): 389–419, doi:10.2140/pjm.1963.13.389, MR0157909.
^Christofides, Demetres; Ellis, David; Keevash, Peter (2013), "An Approximate Vertex-Isoperimetric Inequality for $r$-sets", The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, 4 (20).