Abstract

A normally regular digraph with parameters $(v,k,\lambda,\mu)$ is a directed graph on $v$ vertices whose adjacency matrix $A$ satisfies the equation $AA^t=k I+\lambda (A+A^t)+\mu(J-I-A-A^t)$. This means that every vertex has out-degree $k$, a pair of non-adjacent vertices have $\mu$ common out-neighbours, a pair of vertices connected by an edge in one direction have $\lambda$ common out-neighbours and a pair of vertices connected by edges in both directions have $2\lambda-\mu$ common out-neighbours. We often assume that two vertices can not be connected in both directions. We prove that the adjacency matrix of a normally regular digraph is normal. A connected $k$-regular digraph with normal adjacency matrix is a normally regular digraph if and only if all eigenvalues other than $k$ are on one circle in the complex plane. We prove several non-existence results, structural characterizations, and constructions of normally regular digraphs. In many cases these graphs are Cayley graphs of abelian groups and the construction is then based on a generalization of difference sets.We also show connections to other combinatorial objects: strongly regular graphs, symmetric 2-designs and association schemes.

Highlights

  • We introduce normally regular digraphs and other basic concepts

  • We prove that the adjacency matrix of a normally regular digraph is normal

  • A connected k-regular digraph with normal adjacency matrix is a normally regular digraph if and only if all eigenvalues other than k are on one circle in the complex plane

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Summary

Introduction

We introduce normally regular digraphs and other basic concepts. In Section 2 we show that complements of normally regular digraphs are normally regular and we prove bounds on the parameters. Another very important property of a normally regular digraph, which will be proved later (Corollary 11) is that an NRD(v, k, λ, μ) satisfies that every vertex has in-degree k and that the number of common in-neighbours of two vertices is equal to the number of common out-neighbours This definition may be stated in terms of the adjacency matrix. For a normally regular digraph we will use λ2 = 2λ − μ to denote the number of common out-neighbours of a pair of vertices joined by two edges. The Cayley graph Cay(Q, {i, j, k}) is an NRD(8,3,1,0) with the following adjacency matrix This is the smallest non-trivial normally regular digraph with μ = 0.

Complementary graphs and the parameters
Matrix equations
Eigenvalues
Relation to association schemes
Group divisible partitions
Combinatorial results for small λ
Subplane partition
Bipartite graphs of diameter 3
10 Constructions
10.2 Construction from desarguesian planes
10.3 Product constructions
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