The Paley graphs are
self-complementary: the complement of any Paley graph is isomorphic to it. One isomorphism is via the mapping that takes a vertex to , where is any quadratic nonresidue . Paley graphs are
strongly regular graphs, with parameters :srg \left (q, \tfrac{1}{2}(q-1),\tfrac{1}{4}(q-5),\tfrac{1}{4}(q-1) \right ). This in fact follows from the fact that the graph is
arc-transitive and self-complementary. The strongly regular graphs with parameters of this form (for an arbitrary ) are called
conference graphs, so the Paley graphs form an infinite family of conference graphs. The
adjacency matrix of a conference graph, such as a Paley graph, can be used to construct a
conference matrix, and vice versa. These are matrices whose coefficients are , with zero on the diagaonal, that give a scalar multiple of the
identity matrix when multiplied by their transpose. The eigenvalues of Paley graphs are \tfrac{1}{2}(q-1) (with multiplicity 1) and \tfrac{1}{2} (-1 \pm \sqrt{q}) (both with multiplicity \tfrac{1}{2}(q-1)). They can be calculated using the
quadratic Gauss sum or by using the theory of strongly regular graphs. If is prime, the
isoperimetric number of the Paley graph satisfies the following bounds: {{bi|left=1.6|\displaystyle\frac{q-\sqrt{q}}{4}\leq i(G) \leq \frac{q-1}{4}.}} When is prime, the associated Paley graph is a
Hamiltonian circulant graph. Paley graphs are
quasi-random: the number of times each possible constant-order graph occurs as a subgraph of a Paley graph is (in the limit for large ) the same as for random graphs, and large sets of vertices have approximately the same number of edges as they would in random graphs. • The Paley graph of order 9 is a
locally linear graph, a
rook's graph, and the graph of the
3-3 duoprism. • The Paley graph of order 13 has
book thickness 4 and
queue number 3. • The Paley graph of order 17 is the unique largest graph
G such that neither
G nor its complement contains a complete 4-vertex subgraph. It follows that the
Ramsey number R(4, 4) = 18. • The Paley graph of order 101 is currently the largest known graph
G such that neither
G nor its complement contains a complete 6-vertex subgraph. • Sasukara et al. (1993) use Paley graphs to generalize the construction of the
Horrocks–Mumford bundle. ==Paley digraphs==