Matrix-Forest Theorems
Abstract
The Laplacian matrix of a graph is , where is the adjacency matrix and is the diagonal matrix of vertex degrees. According to the Matrix-Tree Theorem, the number of spanning trees in is equal to any cofactor of an entry of . A rooted forest is a union of disjoint rooted trees. We consider the matrix and prove that the -cofactor of is equal to the number of spanning rooted forests of , in which the vertices and belong to the same tree rooted at . The determinant of equals the total number of spanning rooted forests, therefore the -entry of the matrix can be considered as a measure of relative ''forest-accessibility'' of vertex from (or from ). These results follow from somewhat more general theorems we prove, which concern weighted multigraphs. The analogous theorems for (multi)digraphs are also established. These results provide a graph-theoretic interpretation for the adjugate to the Laplacian characteristic matrix.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.math/0602575,
title = {Matrix-Forest Theorems},
author = {Pavel Chebotarev and Elena Shamis},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:math/0602575},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
Unpublished manuscript (1994-1997); 11 pages