Maximum spread of graphs and bipartite graphs
Abstract
Given any graph G, the (adjacency) spread of G is the maximum absolute difference between any two eigenvalues of the adjacency matrix of G. In this paper, we resolve a pair of 20-year-old conjectures of Gregory, Hershkowitz, and Kirkland regarding the spread of graphs. The first states that for all positive integers n, the n-vertex graph G that maximizes spread is the join of a clique and an independent set, with 2n/3 and n/3 vertices, respectively. Using techniques from the theory of graph limits and numerical analysis, we prove this claim for all n sufficiently large. As an intermediate step, we prove an analogous result for a family of operators in the Hilbert space over L2[0,1]. The second conjecture claims that for any fixed e≤ n2/4, if G maximizes spread over all n-vertex graphs with e edges, then G is bipartite. We prove an asymptotic version of this conjecture. Furthermore, we exhibit an infinite family of counterexamples, which shows that our asymptotic solution is tight up to lower order error terms.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.