Jump to content

Kautz graph

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by The Anome (talk | contribs) at 09:32, 20 November 2006 (In computing: connecting processors in high-performance computing and fault-tolerant computing applications:). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Kautz graph is a directed graph of degree and dimension , which has vertices labeled by all possible strings of length which are composed of characters chosen from an alphabet containing distinct symbols, subject to the condition that adjacent characters in the string cannot be equal ().

The Kautz graph has edges

It is natural to label each such edge of as , giving a one-to-one correspondence between edges of the Kautz graph and vertices of the Kautz graph .

Kautz graphs are closely related to De Bruijn graphs.

Properties

  • For a fixed degree and number of vertices , the Kautz graph has the smallest diameter of any possible directed graph with vertices and degree .
  • All Kautz graphs have Eulerian cycles. (An Eulerian cycle is one which visits each edge exactly once-- This result follows because Kautz graphs have in-degree equal to out-degree for each node)
  • All Kautz graphs have a Hamiltonian cycle (This result follows from the correspondence described above between edges of the Kautz graph and vertices of the Kautz graph ; a Hamiltonian cycle on is given by an Eulerian cycle on )
  • A degree- Kautz graph has disjoint paths from any node to any other node .

In computing

The Kautz graph has been used as a network topology for connecting processors in high-performance computing and fault-tolerant computing applications: such a network is known as a Kautz network.

Kautz graph at PlanetMath.