Degree diameter problem

Unsolved problem in mathematics
Given two positive integers d, k, what is the largest graph of diameter k such that all vertices have degrees at most d?
When the degree is less than or equal to 2 or the diameter is less than or equal to 1, the problem becomes trivial, solved by the cycle graph and complete graph respectively.

In graph theory, the degree diameter problem is the problem of finding the largest possible graph G (in terms of the size of its vertex set V) of diameter k such that the largest degree of any of the vertices in G is at most d. The size of G is bounded above by the Moore bound; for 1 < k and 2 < d, only the Petersen graph, the Hoffman-Singleton graph, and possibly graphs (not yet proven to exist) of diameter k = 2 and degree d = 57 attain the Moore bound. In general, the largest degree-diameter graphs are much smaller in size than the Moore bound.


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