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  2. Waterfall chart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterfall_chart

    An example of waterfall charts. Here, there are 3 total columns called Main Column1, Middle Column, and End Value. The accumulation of successive two intermediate columns from the first total column (Main Column1) as the initial value results in the 2nd total column (Middle Column), and the rest accumulation results in the last total column (End Value) as the final value.

  3. Waterfall plot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterfall_plot

    Waterfall plots are often used to show how two-dimensional phenomena change over time. [1] A three-dimensional spectral waterfall plot is a plot in which multiple curves of data, typically spectra, are displayed simultaneously. Typically the curves are staggered both across the screen and vertically, with "nearer" curves masking the ones behind.

  4. Bridge (graph theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_(graph_theory)

    A graph with 16 vertices and six bridges (highlighted in red) An undirected connected graph with no bridge edges. In graph theory, a bridge, isthmus, cut-edge, or cut arc is an edge of a graph whose deletion increases the graph's number of connected components. [1] Equivalently, an edge is a bridge if and only if it is not contained in any cycle.

  5. Seven Bridges of Königsberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Bridges_of_Königsberg

    Since, at most, two land masses can serve as the endpoints of a walk, the proposition of a walk traversing each bridge once leads to a contradiction. In modern language, Euler shows that the possibility of a walk through a graph, traversing each edge exactly once, depends on the degrees of the nodes. The degree of a node is the number of edges ...

  6. Chemical graph theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_graph_theory

    Chemical graph theory is the topology branch of mathematical chemistry which applies graph theory to mathematical modelling of chemical phenomena. [1] The pioneers of chemical graph theory are Alexandru Balaban, Ante Graovac, Iván Gutman, Haruo Hosoya, Milan Randić and Nenad Trinajstić [2] (also Harry Wiener and others). In 1988, it was ...

  7. Topological index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topological_index

    Topological indices are numerical parameters of a graph which characterize its topology and are usually graph invariant. Topological indices are used for example in the development of quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSARs) in which the biological activity or other properties of molecules are correlated with their chemical structure .

  8. Molecular graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_graph

    In some important cases (topological index calculation etc.) the following classical definition is sufficient: a molecular graph is a connected, undirected graph which admits a one-to-one correspondence with the structural formula of a chemical compound in which the vertices of the graph correspond to atoms of the molecule and edges of the ...

  9. Chemical reaction network theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_reaction_network...

    Dynamical properties of reaction networks were studied in chemistry and physics after the invention of the law of mass action.The essential steps in this study were introduction of detailed balance for the complex chemical reactions by Rudolf Wegscheider (1901), [1] development of the quantitative theory of chemical chain reactions by Nikolay Semyonov (1934), [2] development of kinetics of ...