Tutte–Coxeter graph

In the mathematical field of graph theory, the Tutte–Coxeter graph or Tutte eight-cage or Cremona–Richmond graph is a 3-regular graph with 30 vertices and 45 edges. As the unique smallest cubic graph of girth 8, it is a cage and a Moore graph. It is bipartite, and can be constructed as the Levi graph of the generalized quadrangle W2 (known as the Cremona–Richmond configuration). The graph is named after William Thomas Tutte and H. S. M. Coxeter; it was discovered by Tutte (1947) but its connection to geometric configurations was investigated by both authors in a pair of jointly published papers (Tutte 1958; Coxeter 1958a).

Tutte–Coxeter graph
Named afterW. T. Tutte
H. S. M. Coxeter
Vertices30
Edges45
Radius4
Diameter4
Girth8
Automorphisms1440 (Aut(S6))
Chromatic number2
Chromatic index3
Book thickness3
Queue number2
PropertiesCubic
Cage
Moore graph
Symmetric
Distance-regular
Distance-transitive
Bipartite
Table of graphs and parameters

All the cubic distance-regular graphs are known. The Tutte–Coxeter is one of the 13 such graphs.

It has crossing number 13, book thickness 3 and queue number 2.

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