13,917 research outputs found

    A note on the history of the four-colour conjecture

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    The four-colour conjecture was brought to public attention in 1854, most probably by Francis or Frederick Guthrie. This moves back by six years the date of the earliest known publication.Comment: 3 pages; revised sourcing, added extra informatio

    Recursive generation of IPR fullerenes

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    We describe a new construction algorithm for the recursive generation of all non-isomorphic IPR fullerenes. Unlike previous algorithms, the new algorithm stays entirely within the class of IPR fullerenes, that is: every IPR fullerene is constructed by expanding a smaller IPR fullerene unless it belongs to limited class of irreducible IPR fullerenes that can easily be made separately. The class of irreducible IPR fullerenes consists of 36 fullerenes with up to 112 vertices and 4 infinite families of nanotube fullerenes. Our implementation of this algorithm is faster than other generators for IPR fullerenes and we used it to compute all IPR fullerenes up to 400 vertices.Comment: 19 pages; to appear in Journal of Mathematical Chemistr

    Switching Reconstruction of Digraphs

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    Switching about a vertex in a digraph means to reverse the direction of every edge incident with that vertex. Bondy and Mercier introduced the problem of whether a digraph can be reconstructed up to isomorphism from the multiset of isomorphism types of digraphs obtained by switching about each vertex. Since the largest known non-reconstructible oriented graphs have 8 vertices, it is natural to ask whether there are any larger non-reconstructible graphs. In this paper we continue the investigation of this question. We find that there are exactly 44 non-reconstructible oriented graphs whose underlying undirected graphs have maximum degree at most 2. We also determine the full set of switching-stable oriented graphs, which are those graphs for which all switchings return a digraph isomorphic to the original

    Fullerenes with distant pentagons

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    For each d>0d>0, we find all the smallest fullerenes for which the least distance between two pentagons is dd. We also show that for each dd there is an hdh_d such that fullerenes with pentagons at least distance dd apart and any number of hexagons greater than or equal to hdh_d exist. We also determine the number of fullerenes where the minimum distance between any two pentagons is at least dd, for 1≤d≤51 \le d \le 5, up to 400 vertices.Comment: 15 pages, submitted for publication. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1501.0268
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