Date | November 2010 | Marks available | 6 | Reference code | 10N.3dm.hl.TZ0.5 |
Level | HL only | Paper | Paper 3 Discrete mathematics | Time zone | TZ0 |
Command term | Prove | Question number | 5 | Adapted from | N/A |
Question
A graph has n vertices with degrees 1, 2, 3, …, n. Prove that \(n \equiv 0(\bmod 4)\) or \(n \equiv 3(\bmod 4)\).
Let G be a simple graph with n vertices, \(n \geqslant 2\). Prove, by contradiction, that at least two of the vertices of G must have the same degree.
Markscheme
as each edge contributes 1 to each of the vertices that it is incident with, each edge will contribute 2 to the sum of the degrees of all the vertices (R1)
so \(2e = \sum {{\text{degrees}}} \) (A1)
\(2e = \frac{{n(n + 1)}}{2}\) A1
\(4|n(n + 1)\) A1
n and n + 1 are coprime R1
Note: Accept equivalent reasoning e.g. only one of n and n + 1 can be even.
\(4|n{\text{ or }}4|n + 1\) A1
\(n \equiv 0(\bmod 4){\text{ or }}n \equiv 3(\bmod 4)\) AG
[6 marks]
since G is simple, the highest degree that a vertex can have is n – 1 R1
the degrees of the vertices must belong to the set \(S = \{ 0,{\text{ }}1,{\text{ }}2,{\text{ }} \ldots ,{\text{ }}n - 1\} \) A1
proof by contradiction
if no two vertices have the same degree, all n vertices must have different degrees R1
as there are only n different degrees in set S, the degrees must be precisely the n numbers 0, 1, 2, ..., n – 1 R1
let the vertex with degree 0 be A, then A is not adjacent to any of the other vertices R1
let the vertex with degree n – 1 be B, then B is adjacent to all of the other vertices including A R1R1
this is our desired contradiction, so there must be two vertices of the same degree R1
[8 marks]
Examiners report
Only the top candidates were able to produce logically, well thought-out proofs.
Only the top candidates were able to produce logically, well thought-out proofs.