Graph Theory – Component

discrete mathematicsgraph theory

I was asked to check if there are a graph with the following condition?

(a) It has $3$ components, $20$ vertices and $16$ edges

(b) It has $7$ vertices, $10$ edges, and more than two components.

However I am really confused with the definition of component, the definition I have checked is

a connected component (or just component) of an undirected graph is a subgraph in which any two vertices are connected to each other by paths

And then when I am trying to find a graph in (a), its always easy to find more than $3$ subgraph in a big graph with $20$ vertices, so ill assume the answer is no. But how should I prove this or am I doing it completely wrong?

Best Answer

Answer for (a)

Say we have $a,b,c$ vertices in components, so $a+b+c+=20$. Then each component must have at least $a-1$, $b-1$ and $c-1$ edges, so we have at least $$a-1+b-1+c-1 = 17$$ edges. A contradiction.

Answer for (b)

It is possible, take $K_5$ and two isolated vertices.

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