Herschel graph | |
---|---|
Named after | Alexander Stewart Herschel |
Vertices | 11 |
Edges | 18 |
Automorphisms | 12 (D6) |
Properties | |
Table of graphs and parameters |
In graph theory, a branch of mathematics, the Herschel graph is a bipartite undirected graph with 11 vertices and 18 edges. It is a polyhedral graph (the graph of a convex polyhedron), and is the smallest polyhedral graph that does not have a Hamiltonian cycle, a cycle passing through all its vertices. It is named after British astronomer Alexander Stewart Herschel, because of Herschel's studies of Hamiltonian cycles in polyhedral graphs (but not of this graph).