Abstract

The Moore bipartite bound represents an upper bound on the order of a bipartite graph of maximum degree Δ and diameter D. Bipartite graphs of maximum degree Δ, diameter D and order equal to the Moore bipartite bound are called Moore bipartite graphs. Such bipartite graphs exist only if D=2,3,4 and 6, and for D=3,4,6, they have been constructed only for those values of Δ such that Δ?1 is a prime power. The scarcity of Moore bipartite graphs, together with the applications of such large topologies in the design of interconnection networks, prompted us to investigate what happens when the order of bipartite graphs misses the Moore bipartite bound by a small number of vertices. In this direction the first class of graphs to be studied is naturally the class of bipartite graphs of maximum degree Δ, diameter D, and two vertices less than the Moore bipartite bound (defect 2), that is, bipartite (Δ,D,?2)-graphs. For Δ?3 bipartite (Δ,2,?2)-graphs are the complete bipartite graphs with partite sets of orders Δ and Δ?2. In this paper we consider bipartite (Δ,D,?2)-graphs for Δ?3 and D?3. Some necessary conditions for the existence of bipartite (Δ,3,?2)-graphs for Δ?3 are already known, as well as the non-existence of bipartite (Δ,D,?2)-graphs with Δ?3 and D=4,5,6,8. Furthermore, it had been conjectured that bipartite (Δ,D,?2)-graphs for Δ?3 and D?4 do not exist. Here, using graph spectra techniques, we completely settle this conjecture by proving the non-existence of bipartite (Δ,D,?2)-graphs for all Δ?3 and all D?6.

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