In graph theory, the sphericity of a graph is a graph invariant defined to be the smallest dimension of Euclidean space required to realize the graph as an intersection graph of unit spheres. The sphericity of a graph is a generalization of the boxicity and cubicity invariants defined by F.S. Roberts in the late 1960s.[1] [2] The concept of sphericity was first introduced by Hiroshi Maehara in the early 1980s.[3]
Let
G
G
\operatorname{sph}(G)
n
G
n
Rn
Sphericity can also be defined using the language of space graphs as follows. For a finite set of points in some
n
G
n
G
Rn
Graphs of sphericity 1 are known as interval graphs or indifference graphs. Graphs of sphericity 2 are known as unit disk graphs.
The sphericity of certain graph classes can be computed exactly. The following sphericities were given by Maehara on page 56 of his original paper on the topic.
K1 | Complete graph | 0 | ||
Kn | Complete graph | 1 | n>1 | |
Pn | Path graph | 1 | n>1 | |
Cn | Circuit graph | 2 | n>3 | |
Km(2) | Complete m-partite graph on m sets of size 2 | 2 | m>1 |
The most general known upper bound on sphericity is as follows. Assuming the graph is not complete, then
\operatorname{sph}(G)\leq|G|-\omega(G)
\omega(G)
G
|G|
G.