In graph theory, a book graph (often written ) may be any of several kinds of graph formed by multiple cycles sharing an edge.
Variations
One kind, which may be called a quadrilateral book, consists of pquadrilaterals sharing a common edge (known as the "spine" or "base" of the book). That is, it is a Cartesian product of a star and a single edge.[1][2] The 7-page book graph of this type provides an example of a graph with no harmonious labeling.[2]
A second type, which might be called a triangular book, is the complete tripartite graph K1,1,p. It is a graph consisting of triangles sharing a common edge.[3] A book of this type is a split graph.
This graph has also been called a [4] or a thagomizer graph (after thagomizers, the spiked tails of stegosaurian dinosaurs, because of their pointy appearance in certain drawings) and their graphic matroids have been called thagomizer matroids.[5] Triangular books form one of the key building blocks of line perfect graphs.[6]
The term "book-graph" has been employed for other uses. Barioli[7] used it to mean a graph composed of a number of arbitrary subgraphs having two vertices in common. (Barioli did not write for his book-graph.)
Within larger graphs
Given a graph , one may write for the largest book (of the kind being considered) contained within .
Theorems on books
Denote the Ramsey number of two triangular books by This is the smallest number such that for every -vertex graph, either the graph itself contains as a subgraph, or its complement graph contains as a subgraph.