A graph (other than a
complete graph) has connectivity
k if
k is the size of the smallest subset of vertices such that the graph becomes disconnected if you delete them. In
complete graphs, there is no subset whose removal would disconnect the graph. Some sources modify the definition of connectivity to handle this case, by defining it as the size of the smallest subset of vertices whose deletion results in either a disconnected graph or a single vertex. For this variation, the connectivity of a complete graph K_n is n-1. An equivalent definition is that a graph with at least two vertices is
k-connected if, for every pair of its vertices, it is possible to find
k vertex-independent
paths connecting these vertices; see
Menger's theorem . This definition produces the same answer,
n − 1, for the connectivity of the complete graph
Kn. A
k-connected graph is by definition
connected; it is called
biconnected for
k ≥ 2 and triconnected for
k ≥ 3. == Applications ==