Semi-symmetric graphs are defined as regular graphs (that is, graphs in which all vertices touch equally many edges) in which each two edges are symmetric to each other, but some two vertices are not symmetric.
Jon Folkman was inspired to define and research these graphs in a 1967 paper, after seeing an unpublished manuscript by E. Dauber and
Frank Harary which gave examples of graphs meeting the symmetry condition but not the regularity condition. Folkman's original construction of this graph was a special case of a more general construction of semi-symmetric graphs using
modular arithmetic, based on a prime number p congruent to 1 mod 4. For each such prime, there is a number r such that r^2=-1 mod p, and Folkman uses modular arithmetic to construct a semi-symmetric graph with 2pr vertices. The Folkman graph is the result of this construction for p=5 and r=2. K_5. The green vertices subdivide each edge of K_5, and the red pairs of vertices are the result of doubling the five vertices of K_5. Another construction for the Folkman graph begins with the
complete graph on five vertices, K_5. A new vertex is placed on each of the ten edges of K_5, subdividing each edge into a two-edge path. Then, each of the five original vertices of K_5 is doubled, replacing it by two vertices with the same neighbors. The ten subdivision vertices form one side of the bipartition of the Folkman graph, and the ten vertices in twin pairs coming from the doubled vertices of K_5 form the other side of the bipartition. Because each edge of the result comes from a doubled half of an edge of K_5, and because K_5 has symmetries taking every half-edge to every other half-edge, the result is edge-transitive. It is not vertex-transitive, because the subdivision vertices are not twins with any other vertex, making them different from the doubled vertices coming Every 4-regular semi-symmetric graph in which some two vertices have the same neighborhood can be constructed in the same way, by subdividing and then doubling a 4-regular
symmetric graph such as K_5 or the graph of the
octahedron. However, there also exist larger 4-regular semi-symmetric graphs that do not have any twin vertices. ==Algebraic properties==