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Three disjoint rays in ℝ3 form Borromean rays provided their union is knotted, but the union of any two components is unknotted. We construct infinitely many Borromean rays, uncountably many of which are pairwise inequivalent. We obtain uncountably many Borromean hyperplanes.
Yao and Theta graphs are defined for a given point set and a fixed integer k > 0. The space around each point is divided into k cones of equal angle, and each point is connected to a nearest neighbor in each cone. The difference between Yao and Theta graphs is in the way the nearest neighbor is defined: Yao graphs minimize the Euclidean distance between a point and its neighbor, and Theta graphs minimize the Euclidean distance between a point and the orthogonal projection of its neighbor on the bisector of the hosting cone. We prove that, corresponding to each edge of the Theta graph Θ6, there is a path in the Yao graph Y6 whose length is at most 8.82 times the edge length. Combined with the result of Bonichon et al., who prove an upper bound of 2 on the stretch factor of Θ6, we obtain an upper bound of 17.64 on the stretch factor of Y6.
Let Pn and Cn denote the path and cycle on n vertices, respectively. The dumbbell graph, denoted by Dp,k,q, is the graph obtained from two cycles Cp, Cq and a path Pk+2 by identifying each pendant vertex of Pk+2 with a vertex of a cycle, respectively. The theta graph, denoted by Θr,s,t, is the graph formed by joining two given vertices via three disjoint paths Pr, Ps and Pt, respectively. In this paper, we prove that all dumbbell graphs as well as all theta graphs are determined by their L-spectra.