language-icon Old Web
English
Sign In

Null graph

In the mathematical field of graph theory, the term 'null graph' may refer either to the order-zero graph, or alternatively, to any edgeless graph (the latter is sometimes called an 'empty graph'). In the mathematical field of graph theory, the term 'null graph' may refer either to the order-zero graph, or alternatively, to any edgeless graph (the latter is sometimes called an 'empty graph'). The order-zero graph, K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} , is the unique graph having no vertices (hence its order is zero). It follows that K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} also has no edges. Some authors exclude K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} from consideration as a graph (either by definition, or more simply as a matter of convenience). Whether including K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} as a valid graph is useful depends on context. On the positive side, K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} follows naturally from the usual set-theoretic definitions of a graph (it is the ordered pair (V, E) for which the vertex and edge sets, V and E, are both empty), in proofs it serves as a natural base case for mathematical induction, and similarly, in recursively defined data structures K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} is useful for defining the base case for recursion (by treating the null tree as the child of missing edges in any non-null binary tree, every non-null binary tree has exactly two children). On the negative side, including K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} as a graph requires that many well-defined formulas for graph properties include exceptions for it (for example, either 'counting all strongly connected components of a graph' becomes 'counting all non-null strongly connected components of a graph', or the definition of connected graphs has to be modified not to include K0). To avoid the need for such exceptions, it is often assumed in literature that the term graph implies 'graph with at least one vertex' unless context suggests otherwise. In category theory, the order-zero graph is, according to some definitions of 'category of graphs,' the initial object in the category. K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} does fulfill (vacuously) most of the same basic graph properties as does K 1 {displaystyle K_{1}} (the graph with one vertex and no edges). As some examples, K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} is of size zero, it is equal to its complement graph K 0 ¯ {displaystyle {overline {K_{0}}}} , a forest, and a planar graph. It may be considered undirected, directed, or even both; when considered as directed, it is a directed acyclic graph. And it is both a complete graph and an edgeless graph. However, definitions for each of these graph properties will vary depending on whether context allows for K 0 {displaystyle K_{0}} . For each natural number n, the edgeless graph (or empty graph) K ¯ n {displaystyle {overline {K}}_{n}} of order n is the graph with n vertices and zero edges. An edgeless graph is occasionally referred to as a null graph in contexts where the order-zero graph is not permitted. It is a 0-regular graph. The notation K ¯ n {displaystyle {overline {K}}_{n}} arises from the fact that the n-vertex edgeless graph is the complement of the complete graph K n {displaystyle K_{n}} .

[ "Line graph", "Voltage graph", "Lattice graph", "Toroidal graph", "Circle graph", "Graph canonization", "Windmill graph" ]
Parent Topic
Child Topic
    No Parent Topic