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Modern graph theory

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TLDR
This book presents an account of newer topics, including Szemer'edi's Regularity Lemma and its use; Shelah's extension of the Hales-Jewett Theorem; the precise nature of the phase transition in a random graph process; the connection between electrical networks and random walks on graphs; and the Tutte polynomial and its cousins in knot theory.
Abstract
The time has now come when graph theory should be part of the education of every serious student of mathematics and computer science, both for its own sake and to enhance the appreciation of mathematics as a whole. This book is an in-depth account of graph theory, written with such a student in mind; it reflects the current state of the subject and emphasizes connections with other branches of pure mathematics. The volume grew out of the author's earlier book, Graph Theory -- An Introductory Course, but its length is well over twice that of its predecessor, allowing it to reveal many exciting new developments in the subject. Recognizing that graph theory is one of several courses competing for the attention of a student, the book contains extensive descriptive passages designed to convey the flavor of the subject and to arouse interest. In addition to a modern treatment of the classical areas of graph theory such as coloring, matching, extremal theory, and algebraic graph theory, the book presents a detailed account of newer topics, including Szemer\'edi's Regularity Lemma and its use, Shelah's extension of the Hales-Jewett Theorem, the precise nature of the phase transition in a random graph process, the connection between electrical networks and random walks on graphs, and the Tutte polynomial and its cousins in knot theory. In no other branch of mathematics is it as vital to tackle and solve challenging exercises in order to master the subject. To this end, the book contains an unusually large number of well thought-out exercises: over 600 in total. Although some are straightforward, most of them are substantial, and others will stretch even the most able reader.

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Virial expansion for almost diagonal random matrices

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On the second largest eigenvalue of the signless Laplacian

TL;DR: In this paper, the signless Laplacian of a graph of order n was shown to be a necessary and sufficient condition for the equality q k (G ) = n - 2, where 1 k ≤ n.
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A review on molecular topology: applying graph theory to drug discovery and design

TL;DR: This review focuses on pharmacology, which is a novel field of application of molecular topology, and summarizes some recent developments to bring closer this interesting biomedical application of mathematics to an interdisciplinary readership.
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Noise-stability and central limit theorems for effective resistance of random electric networks

TL;DR: In this article, the Walsh decomposition of point-to-point effective resistances on countable random electric networks with i.i.d. resistances is investigated, and it is shown that it is concentrated on low levels.