No Arabic abstract
In 2003 Peter Cameron introduced the concept of a Jordan scheme and asked whether there exist Jordan schemes which are not symmetrisations of coherent configurations (proper Jordan schemes). The question was answered affirmatively by the authors last year and some of the examples were presented in an essay uploaded to the arXiv. In this paper we describe several infinite series of proper Jordan schemes and present first developments in the theory of Jordan schemes - a new class of algebraic-combinatorial objects.
A special class of Jordan algebras over a field $F$ of characteristic zero is considered. Such an algebra consists of an $r$-dimensional subspace of the vector space of all square matrices of a fixed order $n$ over $F$. It contains the identity matrix, the all-one matrix; it is closed with respect to correction{matrix transposition}, Schur-Hadamard (entrywise) multiplication and the Jordan product $A*B=frac 12 (AB+BA)$, where $AB$ is the usual matrix product. The suggested axiomatics (with some natural additional requirements) implies an equivalent reformulation in terms of symmetric binary relations on a vertex set of cardinality $n$. The appearing graph-theoretical structure is called a Jordan scheme of order $n$ and rank $r$. A significant source of Jordan schemes stems from the symmetrization of association schemes. Each such structure is called a non-proper Jordan scheme. The question about the existence of proper Jordan schemes was posed a few times by Peter J. Cameron. In the current text an affirmative answer to this question is given. The first small examples presented here have orders $n=15,24,40$. Infinite classes of proper Jordan schemes of rank 5 and larger are introduced. A prolific construction for schemes of rank 5 and order $n=binom{3^d+1}{2}$, $din {mathbb N}$, is outlined. The text is written in the style of an essay. The long exposition relies on initial computer experiments, a large amount of diagrams, and finally is supported by a number of patterns of general theoretical reasonings. The essay contains also a historical survey and an extensive bibliography.
An association scheme is called quasi-thin if the valency of each its basic relation is one or two. A quasi-thin scheme is Kleinian if the thin residue of it forms a Klein group with respect to the relation product. It is proved that any Kleinian scheme arises from near-pencil on~$3$ points, or affine or projective plane of order~$2$. The main result is that any non-Kleinian quasi-thin scheme a) is the two-orbit scheme of a suitable permutation group, and b) is characterized up to isomorphism by its intersection number array. An infinite family of Kleinian quasi-thin schemes for which neither a) nor b) holds is also constructed.
In this paper we characterize large regular graphs using certain entries in the projection matrices onto the eigenspaces of the graph. As a corollary of this result, we show that large association schemes become $P$-polynomial association schemes. Our results are summarized as follows. Let $G=(V,E)$ be a connected $k$-regular graph with $d+1$ distinct eigenvalues $k=theta_0>theta_1>cdots>theta_d$. Since the diameter of $G$ is at most $d$, we have the Moore bound [ |V| leq M(k,d)=1+k sum_{i=0}^{d-1}(k-1)^i. ] Note that if $|V|> M(k,d-1)$ holds, the diameter of $G$ is equal to $d$. Let $E_i$ be the orthogonal projection matrix onto the eigenspace corresponding to $theta_i$. Let $partial(u,v)$ be the path distance of $u,v in V$. Theorem. Assume $|V|> M(k,d-1)$ holds. Then for $x,y in V$ with $partial(x,y)=d$, the $(x,y)$-entry of $E_i$ is equal to [ -frac{1}{|V|}prod_{j=1,2,ldots,d, j e i} frac{theta_0-theta_j}{theta_i-theta_j}. ] If a symmetric association scheme $mathfrak{X}=(X,{R_i}_{i=0}^d)$ has a relation $R_i$ such that the graph $(X,R_i)$ satisfies the above condition, then $mathfrak{X}$ is $P$-polynomial. Moreover we show the dual version of this theorem for spherical sets and $Q$-polynomial association schemes.
Let $k,l,m,n$, and $mu$ be positive integers. A $mathbb{Z}_mu$--{it scheme of valency} $(k,l)$ and {it order} $(m,n)$ is a $m times n$ array $(S_{ij})$ of subsets $S_{ij} subseteq mathbb{Z}_mu$ such that for each row and column one has $sum_{j=1}^n |S_{ij}| = k $ and $sum_{i=1}^m |S_{ij}| = l$, respectively. Any such scheme is an algebraic equivalent of a $(k,l)$-semi-regular bipartite voltage graph with $n$ and $m$ vertices in the bipartition sets and voltages coming from the cyclic group $mathbb{Z}_mu$. We are interested in the subclass of $mathbb{Z}_mu$--schemes that are characterized by the property $a - b + c - d; ot equiv ;0$ (mod $mu$) for all $a in S_{ij}$, $b in S_{ih}$, $c in S_{gh}$, and $d in S_{gj}$ where $i,g in {1,...,m}$ and $j,h in {1,...,n}$ need not be distinct. These $mathbb{Z}_mu$--schemes can be used to represent adjacency matrices of regular graphs of girth $ge 5$ and semi-regular bipartite graphs of girth $ge 6$. For suitable $rho, sigma in mathbb{N}$ with $rho k = sigma l$, they also represent incidence matrices for polycyclic $(rho mu_k, sigma mu_l)$ configurations and, in particular, for all known Desarguesian elliptic semiplanes. Partial projective closures yield {it mixed $mathbb{Z}_mu$-schemes}, which allow new constructions for Krv{c}adinacs sporadic configuration of type $(34_6)$ and Balbuenas bipartite $(q-1)$-regular graphs of girth 6 on as few as $2(q^2-q-2)$ vertices, with $q$ ranging over prime powers. Besides some new results, this survey essentially furnishes new proofs in terms of (mixed) $mathbb{Z}_mu$--schemes for ad-hoc constructions used thus far.
It is proved that with finitely many possible exceptions, each cyclotomic scheme over finite field is determined up to isomorphism by the tensor of 2-dimensional intersection numbers; for infinitely many schemes, this result cannot be improved. As a consequence, the Weisfeiler-Leman dimension of a Paley graph or tournament is at most 3 with possible exception of several small graphs.