Joshua Lederberg received a the Nobel prize in medicine in 1958 and he was a major contributor to the Stanford DENDRAL software expert system that
Given a mass spectrum of an organic molecular sample and the chemical formula of the molecule, the program will produce a short list of molecular "graphs" as hypotheses...
In that expert system non-Hamiltonicity plays a central role and Lederberg devised a method of generating non-Hamilton graphs by means of a 9-vertex "gadget" and with it constructed a planar cubic and biconnected non-Hamiltonian graph with 18 vertices and also the better known Barnette-Bosák-Lederberg graph that is triply connected.
Question:
- how well is Lederberg's contribution to graph theory known in the graph theory community?
- is chemical graph theory recognized as a research topic in graph theory?
A search for "Lederberg" on MO didn't succeed and trying to find a definition or illustration of Lederberg's 18-vertex graph is also a frustrating task, even with AI assistance.
I'm not sure if the 9-vertex gadget or the 18-vertex Lederberg graphs are known to the house of graphs


