Graph structure

In July 2016, Cosmin Ionita and Pat Quillen of MathWorks used MATLAB to analyze the Math Genealogy Project graph. At the time, the genealogy graph contained 200,037 vertices. There were 7639 (3.8%) isolated vertices and 1962 components of size two (advisor-advisee pairs where we have no information about the advisor). The largest component of the genealogy graph contained 180,094 vertices, accounting for 90% of all vertices in the graph. The main component has 7323 root vertices (individuals with no advisor) and 137,155 leaves (mathematicians with no students), accounting for 76.2% of the vertices in this component. The next largest component sizes were 81, 50, 47, 34, 34, 33, 31, 31, and 30.

For historical comparisonn, we also have data from June 2010, when Professor David Joyner of the United States Naval Academy asked for data from our database to analyze it as a graph. At the time, the genealogy graph had 142,688 vertices. Of these, 7,190 were isolated vertices (5% of the total). The largest component had 121,424 vertices (85% of the total number). The next largest component had 128 vertices. The next largest component sizes were 79, 61, 45, and 42. The most frequent size of a nontrivial component was 2; there were 1937 components of size 2. The component with 121,424 vertices had 4,639 root verticies, i.e., mathematicians for whom the advisor is currently unknown.

Top 25 Advisors

NameStudents
C.-C. Jay Kuo181
Egbert Havinga146
Pekka Neittaanmäki133
Roger Meyer Temam130
Ramalingam Chellappa127
Shlomo Noach (Stephen Ram) Sawilowsky111
Andrew Bernard Whinston107
Paul Scholten105
Dimitris John Bertsimas104
Willi Jäger101
Ronold Wyeth Percival King100
Alexander Vasil'evich Mikhalëv99
Johan Pieter Wibaut97
Leonard Salomon Ornstein95
Kurt Mehlhorn94
Erol Gelenbe93
Bart De Moor93
Rutger Anthony van Santen91
Ludwig Prandtl89
Yurii Alekseevich Mitropolsky88
Wolfgang Karl Härdle86
Holm Altenbach86
Rudiger W. Dornbusch85
Michael Irwin Jordan85
Bruce Ramon Vogeli82

Expand to top 75 advisors

Most Descendants

NameDescendantsYear of Degree
Abu Abdallah Al-Husayn ibn Ibrahim al-Natili244456
Abu Mansur al-Hasan ibn Nuh al-Qumri244456
Abu Sahl 'Isa ibn Yahya al-Masihi244456
Abu ʿAli al-Husayn (Avicenna) ibn Sina244455
Bahmanyār ibn al-Marzubān244454
Ghiyāth al-Dīn Abū al-Fatḥ ʿUmar ibn Ibrāhīm al-Khayyām al-Nīsābūrī2444531068
Saraf al-Dīn Muhammad al-Masʿūdī al-Marwazī244452
Sharaf al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī244450
Fakhr al-Dīn Muhammad al-Rēzī244450
Qutb al-Dīn Ibrāhīm al-Mīṣrī2444491222
Kamāl al-Dīn Ibn Yūnus244449
Athīr al-Dīn al-Mufaḍḍal al-Abharī2444481264
Nasir al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī244447
Shams al‐Dīn al‐Bukhārī244444
Gregory Chioniadis2444431296
Manuel Bryennios2444421300
Theodore Metochites2444411315
Gregory Palamas2444381316
Nilos Kabasilas2444371363
Demetrios Kydones244436
Elissaeus Judaeus244411
Georgios Plethon Gemistos2444101380, 1393
Basilios Bessarion2444071436
Manuel Chrysoloras244398
Giovanni Conversini2443981363

Nonplanarity

The Mathematics Genealogy Project graph is nonplanar. Thanks to Professor Ezra Brown of Virginia Tech for assisting in finding the subdivision of K3,3 depicted below. The green vertices form one color class and the yellow ones form the other. Interestingly, Gauß is the only vertex that needs to be connected by paths with more than one edge.

K_{3,3} in the Genealogy graph

Frequency Counts

The table below indicates the values of number of students for mathematicians in our database along with the number of mathematicians having that many students.

Number of StudentsFrequency
0255269
134709
212664
37303
44959
53806
62894
72316
81936
91565
101327
111115
12975
13853
14694
15624
16544
17495
18381
19345
20338
21270
22253
23244
24201
25201
26168
27149
28145
30111
29105
3186
3275
3470
3668
3366
3563
3747
3944
3840
4134
4333
4232
4531
4027
4627
4422
5220
4919
4718
4818
5017
5415
5114
5314
5514
5712
6012
5611
5810
649
598
668
637
687
707
827
616
726
625
695
735
745
755
795
654
783
672
712
762
802
852
862
932
771
811
881
891
911
941
951
971
991
1001
1011
1041
1051
1071
1111
1271
1301
1331
1461
1811