
doi: 10.37236/1751
The rank of the adjacency matrix of a graph is bounded above by the number of distinct non-zero rows of that matrix. In general, the rank is lower than this number because there may be some non-trivial linear combination of the rows equal to zero. We show the somewhat surprising result that this never occurs for the class of cographs. Therefore, the rank of a cograph is equal to the number of distinct non-zero rows of its adjacency matrix.
adjacency matrix, Graphs and linear algebra (matrices, eigenvalues, etc.)
adjacency matrix, Graphs and linear algebra (matrices, eigenvalues, etc.)
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