Directed graph


In mathematics, and more specifically in graph theory, a directed graph is a graph that is made up of a set of vertices connected by edges, where the edges have a direction associated with them.

Definition

In formal terms, a directed graph is an ordered pair where
It differs from an ordinary or undirected graph, in that the latter is defined in terms of unordered pairs of vertices, which are usually called edges, arcs, or lines.
The aforementioned definition does not allow a directed graph to have multiple arrows with the same source and target nodes, but some authors consider a broader definition that allows directed graphs to have such multiple arrows. More specifically, these entities are addressed as directed multigraphs.

On the other hand, the aforementioned definition allows a directed graph to have loops, but some authors consider a narrower definition that doesn't allow directed graphs to have loops.
More specifically, directed graphs without loops are addressed as simple directed graphs, while directed graphs with loops are addressed as loop-digraphs.

Types of directed graphs

Subclasses

An arrow is considered to be directed from x to y; y is called the head and x is called the tail of the arrow; y is said to be a direct successor of x and x is said to be a direct predecessor of y. If a path leads from x to y, then y is said to be a successor of x and reachable from x, and x is said to be a predecessor of y. The arrow is called the inverted arrow of.
The adjacency matrix of a multidigraph with loops is the integer-valued matrix with rows and columns corresponding to the vertices, where a nondiagonal entry aij is the number of arrows from vertex i to vertex j, and the diagonal entry aii is the number of loops at vertex i. The adjacency matrix of a directed graph is unique up to identical permutation of rows and columns.
Another matrix representation for a directed graph is its incidence matrix.
See direction for more definitions.

Indegree and outdegree

For a vertex, the number of head ends adjacent to a vertex is called the indegree of the vertex and the number of tail ends adjacent to a vertex is its outdegree.
Let and. The indegree of v is denoted deg and its outdegree is denoted deg+.
A vertex with is called a source, as it is the origin of each of its outcoming arrows. Similarly, a vertex with is called a sink, since it is the end of each of its incoming arrows.
The degree sum formula states that, for a directed graph,
If for every vertex,, the graph is called a balanced directed graph.

Degree sequence

The degree sequence of a directed graph is the list of its indegree and outdegree pairs; for the above example we have degree sequence,,, ). The degree sequence is a directed graph invariant so isomorphic directed graphs have the same degree sequence. However, the degree sequence does not, in general, uniquely identify a directed graph; in some cases, non-isomorphic digraphs have the same degree sequence.
The directed graph realization problem is the problem of finding a directed graph with the degree sequence a given sequence of positive integer pairs. A sequence which is the degree sequence of some directed graph, i.e. for which the directed graph realization problem has a solution, is called a directed graphic or directed graphical sequence. This problem can either be solved by the Kleitman–Wang algorithm or by the Fulkerson–Chen–Anstee theorem.

Directed graph connectivity

A directed graph is weakly connected if the undirected underlying graph obtained by replacing all directed edges of the graph with undirected edges is a connected graph. A directed graph is strongly connected or strong if it contains a directed path from x to y and a directed path from y to x for every pair of vertices. The strong components are the maximal strongly connected subgraphs.