, an example of a nearly planar graph. If a graph is an apex graph, it is not necessarily the case that it has a unique apex. For instance, in the minor-minimal nonplanar graphs
K5 and
K3,3, any of the vertices can be chosen as the apex. defined a
nearly planar graph to be a nonplanar apex graph with the property that all vertices can be the apex of the graph; thus,
K5 and
K3,3 are nearly planar. He provided a classification of these graphs into four subsets, one of which consists of the graphs that (like the
Möbius ladders) can be embedded onto the
Möbius strip in such a way that the single edge of the strip coincides with a
Hamiltonian cycle of the graph. Prior to the proof of the
four color theorem, he proved that every nearly planar graph can be colored with at most four colors, except for the graphs formed from a
wheel graph with an odd outer cycle by replacing the hub vertex with two adjacent vertices, which require five colors. Additionally, he proved that, with a single exception (the eight-vertex
complement graph of the
cube) every nearly planar graph has an embedding onto the
projective plane. However, the phrase "nearly planar graph" is highly ambiguous: it has also been used to refer to apex graphs, graphs formed by adding one edge to a planar graph, and graphs formed from a planar embedded graph by replacing a bounded number of faces by "vortexes" of bounded
pathwidth, as well as for other less precisely defined sets of graphs. ==Related graph classes==