Abstract
The concept of local pseudo-distance-regularity, introduced in this paper, can be thought of as a natural generalization of distance-regularity for non-regular graphs. Intuitively speaking, such a concept is related to the regularity of graph Γ when it is seen from a given vertex. The price to be paid for speaking about a kind of distance-regularity in the non-regular case seems to be locality. Thus, we find out that there are no genuine "global" pseudo-distance-regular graphs: when pseudo-distance-regularity is shared by all the vertices, the graph turns out to be distance-regular. Our main result is a characterization of locally pseudo-distance-regular graphs, in terms of the existence of the highest-degree member of a sequence of orthogonal polynomials. As a particular case, we obtain the following new characterization of distance-regular graphs: A graph Γ, with adjacency matrix A, is distance-regular if and only if Γ has spectrally maximum diameter D, all its vertices have eccentricity D, and the distance matrix AD is a polynomial of degree D in A. © 1996 Academic Press, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Fiol, M. A., Garriga, E., & Yebra, J. L. A. (1996). Locally pseudo-distance-regular graphs. Journal of Combinatorial Theory. Series B, 68(2), 179–205. https://doi.org/10.1006/jctb.1996.0063
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