Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4657008 | Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B | 2012 | 11 Pages |
It is well known that the spectral radius of a tree whose maximum degree is Δ cannot exceed . A similar upper bound holds for arbitrary planar graphs, whose spectral radius cannot exceed , and more generally, for all d-degenerate graphs, where the corresponding upper bound is . Following this, we say that a graph G is spectrally d-degenerate if every subgraph H of G has spectral radius at most . In this paper we derive a rough converse of the above-mentioned results by proving that each spectrally d-degenerate graph G contains a vertex whose degree is at most 4dlog2(Δ(G)/d) (if Δ(G)⩾2d). It is shown that the dependence on Δ in this upper bound cannot be eliminated, as long as the dependence on d is subexponential. It is also proved that the problem of deciding if a graph is spectrally d-degenerate is co-NP-complete.