Consider the $N\times N$ matrix $$ M = \left(\begin{array} \\ 0 & 1 & & 0 \\ 1 & \ddots & \ddots & \\ & \ddots & \ddots & 1 \\ 0 & & 1 & 0 \\ \end{array}\right) $$
which comes from the adjacency matrix of a graph corresponding to a one-dimensional chain of $N$ nodes with dangling ends. A cartoon of this graph is $$\circ -\circ -\circ -\circ -\cdots-\circ -\circ$$
It turns out that if you plot a histogram of its eigenvalues, it appears to fit exactly with an arcsine distribution $$f(x) = \frac{1} {\pi \sqrt{4-x^2}}, \vert x \vert < 2 $$ which is exactly what one would expect from the free convolution of the binomial distribution $$ p(x) = \frac 1 2 \left( \delta\left(x-1\right) + \delta \left(x+1\right)\right)$$ with itself.
Is this mere coincidence, or evidence of something deeper? I feel like this must be some example of a known result out there.
I've gotten as far as figuring out how $\pm 1$ shows up; you can write $M$ as the sum of two pieces $$ M = A + B $$ $$ A = \left(\begin{array}{cccccc} 0 & 1\\ 1 & 0\\ & & 0 & 1\\ & & 1 & 0\\ & & & & \ddots\\ & & & & & \ddots \end{array}\right) = \sigma_x \oplus \sigma_x \oplus \cdots $$ $$ B = \left(\begin{array}{cccccc} 0\\ & 0 & 1\\ & 1 & 0\\ & & & 0 & 1\\ & & & 1 & 0\\ & & & & & \ddots \end{array}\right) = [0] \oplus \sigma_x \oplus \sigma_x \oplus \cdots $$
where $\sigma_x$ is the Pauli sigma matrix which of course has eigenvalues $\pm 1$. It must be that these two matrices are freely independent in the $N\rightarrow \infty$ limit, and possibly even for finite $N$ also, so that this reduces to the free convolution described above.
I may be reading too much into this, but it's interesting to me that this is a completely deterministic matrix problem with free probabilistic characteristics. I'm not at all familiar with the algebraic aspects of free probability theory, let alone what the graph theoretic relationships would be.