13 research outputs found
On the structure of sequentially Cohen--Macaulay bigraded modules
Let be a field and be the standard
bigraded polynomial ring over . In this paper, we explicitly describe the
structure of finitely generated bigraded "sequentially Cohen--Macaulay"
-modules with respect to . Next, we give a
characterization of sequentially Cohen--Macaulay modules with respect to in
terms of local cohomology modules. Cohen--Macaulay modules that are
sequentially Cohen--Macaulay with respect to are considered
Spectral symmetry in conference matrices
A conference matrix of order is an matrix with diagonal
entries and off-diagonal entries satisfying . If
is symmetric, then has a symmetric spectrum (that is,
) and eigenvalues . We show that many principal
submatrices of also have symmetric spectrum, which leads to examples of
Seidel matrices of graphs (or, equivalently, adjacency matrices of complete
signed graphs) with a symmetric spectrum. In addition, we show that some Seidel
matrices with symmetric spectrum can be characterized by this construction
Signed graphs cospectral with the path
A signed graph is said to be determined by its spectrum if every
signed graph with the same spectrum as is switching isomorphic with
. Here it is proved that the path , interpreted as a signed graph,
is determined by its spectrum if and only if , or 2 (mod 4),
unless , or
On sign-symmetric signed graphs
A signed graph is said to be sign-symmetric if it is switching isomorphic to its negation. Bipartite signed graphs are trivially sign-symmetric. We give new constructions of non-bipartite sign-symmetric signed graphs. Sign-symmetric signed graphs have a symmetric spectrum but not the other way around. We present constructions of signed graphs with symmetric spectra which are not sign-symmetric. This, in particular answers a problem posed by Belardo, Cioabă, Koolen, and Wang (2018)
Spectral symmetry in conference matrices
A conference matrix of order n is an n× n matrix C with diagonal entries 0 and off-diagonal entries ± 1 satisfying CC⊤= (n- 1) I. If C is symmetric, then C has a symmetric spectrum Σ (that is, Σ = - Σ) and eigenvalues ±n-1. We show that many principal submatrices of C also have symmetric spectrum, which leads to examples of Seidel matrices of graphs (or, equivalently, adjacency matrices of complete signed graphs) with a symmetric spectrum. In addition, we show that some Seidel matrices with symmetric spectrum can be characterized by this construction
Spectral Symmetry in Conference Matrices
A conference matrix of order is an matrix with diagonal entries and off-diagonal entries satisfying . If is symmetric, then has a symmetric spectrum (that is, ) and eigenvalues . We show that many principal submatrices of also have symmetric spectrum, which leads to examples of Seidel matrices of graphs (or, equivalently, adjacency matrices of complete signed graphs) with a symmetric spectrum. In addition, we show that some Seidel matrices with symmetric spectrum can be characterized by this construction
On sign-symmetric signed graphs
A signed graph is said to be sign-symmetric if it is switching isomorphic to its negation. Bipartite signed graphs are trivially sign-symmetric. We give new constructions of non-bipartite sign-symmetric signed graphs. Sign-symmetric signed graphs have a symmetric spectrum but not the other way around. We present constructions of signed graphs with symmetric spectra which are not sign-symmetric. This, in particular answers a problem posed by Belardo, Cioabă, Koolen, and Wang (2018)
On sign-symmetric signed graphs
A signed graph is said to be sign-symmetric if it is switching isomorphic to its negation. Bipartite signed graphs are trivially sign-symmetric. We give new constructions of non-bipartite sign-symmetric signed graphs. Sign-symmetric signed graphs have a symmetric spectrum but not the other way around. We present constructions of signed graphs with symmetric spectra which are not sign-symmetric. This, in particular answers a problem posed by Belardo, Cioabă, Koolen, and Wang (2018)