Descartes snark

Descartes snark

Image of a Descartes snark.
Named after Blanche Descartes
Vertices 210
Edges 315
Girth 5
Chromatic index 4
Properties Cubic
Snark

In the mathematical field of graph theory, a Descartes snark is an undirected graph with 210 vertices and 315 edges. It is a snark, first discovered by William Tutte in 1948 under the pseudonym Blanche Descartes.[1]

A Descartes snark is obtained from the Petersen graph by replacing each vertex with a nonagon and each edge with a particular graph closely related to the Petersen graph. Because there are multiple ways to perform this procedure, there are multiple Descartes snarks.

Notes

  1. Descartes, Blanche. "Network Colorings," The Mathematical Gazette (London, 32:299. p. 67–69, 1948.
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