Background:
- Conformal field theories (CFTs) in two dimensions are partially characterized by a so-called central charge (characterizing the central extension of the Virasoro algebra which defines it). Under a condition of unitarity and minimality, all CFTs with $c<1$ have been classified. These make up the so-called minimal models $\mathcal M(m+1,m)$, where $m$ can be any integer $\geq 2$. The central charge $c_m$ of $\mathcal M(m+1,m)$ is given by $$ c_m = 1 - \frac{6}{m(m+1)} $$
- Seemingly unrelated, there is the notion of the Beraha numbers. These are important numbers in algebraic graph theory, appearing in the study of the roots of so-called chromatic polynomials, which count the ways you can color graphs with a given set of colors. They are given by $$ B_m = 4\cos^2 \left( \frac{\pi}{m} \right) $$
I am somewhat struck by a curious relationship between the central charge $c_m$ of the minimal model $\mathcal M(m+1,m)$ and the Beraha number $B_{m+1}$. To let the numbers speak for themselves:
$\begin{array}{c|c|c} m & 4^{c_m} & B_{m+1} \\ \hline 2 & 1 & 1 \\ 3 & 2 & 2 \\ 4 & 4^\frac{7}{10} \approx 2.639 & 1+\textrm{golden ratio} \approx 2.618 \\ 5 & 4^\frac{4}{5} \approx 3.031 & 3 \\ 6 & 4^\frac{6}{7} \approx 3.281 & \textrm{silver constant} \approx 3.247\\ 7 & 4^\frac{25}{28} \approx 3.448 & 2 + \sqrt{2} \approx 3.414\\ 8 & 4^\frac{11}{12} \approx 3.564 & 2+2\cos\left(\frac{2\pi}{9}\right)\approx 3.532 \\ 9 & 4^\frac{14}{15} \approx 3.647 & \frac{1}{2} \left( 5+\sqrt{5} \right) \approx 3.618 \\ 10 & 4^\frac{52}{55} \approx 3.709 & 2+2\cos\left(\frac{2\pi}{11}\right)\approx 3.683 \\ 11 & 4^\frac{21}{22} \approx 3.756 & 2+\sqrt{3} \approx 3.732 \\ 12 & 4^\frac{25}{26} \approx 3.792 & 2+2\cos\left(\frac{2\pi}{13}\right) \approx 3.771 \\ \vdots & \vdots & \vdots \\ \infty & 4 & 4 \end{array}$
As $m$ increases, the relationship gets obscured (or to phrase it more pessimistically, becomes perhaps less meaningful) since all the values get bunched up near each other (although it is curious to note that always $4^{c_m} \geq B_{m+1}$). Nevertheless the above table contains various apparently serendipitous relationships, suggesting --at least to me-- that there must be some conceptual link between $4^{c_m}$ and $B_{m+1}$. One possible relationship, might be if $4^{c_{m+1}}$ occurs as the zero of a chromatic polynomial, since the Beraha numbers are known to be accumulation points of such zeros (in the infinite graph limit).
How to `explain' the above table?
To be clear, both numbers $c_m$ and $B_{m+1}$ have been known to appear together, e.g. in the discussion of Potts models (of which my knowledge is limited), but no direct relationship (of the type that I am hinting at) has been discussed.