Hypercube graph

Hypercube graph
The hypercube graph
Vertices
Edges
Diameter
Girth4 if
Automorphisms
Chromatic number2
Spectrum
PropertiesSymmetric
Distance regular
Unit distance
Hamiltonian
Bipartite
Polytopal
Notation
Table of graphs and parameters

In graph theory, the hypercube graph is the edge graph of the -dimensional hypercube, that is, it is the graph formed from the vertices and edges of the hypercube. For instance, the cube graph is the graph formed by the 8 vertices and 12 edges of a three-dimensional cube. has vertices, edges, and is a regular graph with edges touching each vertex.

The hypercube graph may also be constructed by creating a vertex for each subset of an -element set, with two vertices adjacent when their subsets differ in a single element, or by creating a vertex for each -digit binary number, with two vertices adjacent when their binary representations differ in a single digit. It is the -fold Cartesian product of the two-vertex complete graph, and may be decomposed into two copies of connected to each other by a perfect matching.

Hypercube graphs should not be confused with cubic graphs, which are graphs that have exactly three edges touching each vertex. The only hypercube graph that is a cubic graph is the cubical graph .