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Sharp upper and lower bounds on the number of spanning trees in Cartesian product of graphs (1210.6340v1)

Published 23 Oct 2012 in math.CO

Abstract: Let $G_1$ and $G_2$ be simple graphs and let $n_1 = |V(G_1)|$, $m_1 = |E(G_1)|$, $n_2 = |V(G_2)|$ and $m_2 = |E(G_2)|.$ In this paper we derive sharp upper and lower bounds for the number of spanning trees $\tau$ in the Cartesian product $G_1 \square G_2$ of $G_1$ and $G_2$. We show that: $$ \tau(G_1 \square G_2) \geq \frac{2{(n_1-1)(n_2-1)}}{n_1n_2} (\tau(G_1) n_1){\frac{n_2+1}{2}} (\tau(G_2)n_2){\frac{n_1+1}{2}}$$ and $$\tau(G_1 \square G_2) \leq \tau(G_1)\tau(G_2) [\frac{2m_1}{n_1-1} + \frac{2m_2}{n_2-1}]{(n_1-1)(n_2-1)}.$$ We also characterize the graphs for which equality holds. As a by-product we derive a formula for the number of spanning trees in $K_{n_1} \square K_{n_2}$ which turns out to be $n_{1}{n_1-2}n_2{n_2-2}(n_1+n_2){(n_1-1)(n_2-1)}.$

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