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arxiv: 2407.01625 · v2 · pith:Z26X2JSDnew · submitted 2024-06-29 · 🧮 math.CO

Balanced clique subdivisions and cycles lengths in K_(s, t)-free graphs

Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 23:18 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.CO
keywords K_{s,t}-free graphsbalanced clique subdivisioncycle length reciprocalsaverage degreesublinear expansionextremal graph theoryMader conjecture
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The pith

K_{s,t}-free graphs with average degree d contain balanced clique subdivisions of size Ω(d^{s/(2(s-1))}).

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper shows that every K_{s,t}-free graph with average degree d has a balanced subdivision of a clique with at least Ω(d^{s/(2(s-1))}) vertices. A balanced subdivision is one in which every edge of the clique is subdivided the same number of times. It also proves that the sum of the reciprocals of the lengths of all cycles in the graph is at least (s/(2(s-1)) - o_d(1)) log d. This improves on a prior result that guaranteed only an ordinary subdivision and a weaker lower bound of (1/2 - o_d(1)) log d on the reciprocal sum. The proofs use the sublinear expansion property of the graph along with new structural techniques.

Core claim

Every K_{s,t}-free graph with average degree d contains a balanced subdivision of a clique with Ω(d^{s/(2(s-1))}) vertices. The sum of reciprocals of cycle lengths is at least (s/(2(s-1)) - o_d(1)) log d.

What carries the argument

Sublinear expansion property combined with novel structural techniques to enforce equal subdivision lengths on all edges of the target clique.

If this is right

  • Such graphs contain subdivisions that are balanced, allowing for uniform path lengths in the clique structure.
  • The cycle structure is dense enough that the harmonic sum of cycle lengths grows faster than the previous 1/2 exponent.
  • This provides a stronger confirmation of the subdivision size in Mader's conjecture for the balanced case.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The method could be adapted to obtain balanced subdivisions in other classes of graphs with forbidden subgraphs.
  • Constructing extremal K_{s,t}-free graphs that achieve only smaller balanced subdivisions would test the tightness of the exponent.
  • Improved cycle bounds may help in analyzing the girth or cycle distributions in sparse graphs without dense bipartite subgraphs.

Load-bearing premise

The novel structural techniques combined with the sublinear expansion property are sufficient to produce a balanced subdivision rather than an arbitrary one.

What would settle it

A K_{s,t}-free graph with average degree d that has no balanced clique subdivision larger than o(d^{s/(2(s-1))}) vertices, or whose sum of reciprocal cycle lengths is smaller than (s/(2(s-1)) - o(1)) log d.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2407.01625 by Donglei Yang, Fan Yang, Jianfeng Hou, Yindong Jin.

Figure 3.1
Figure 3.1. Figure 3.1: An (h0, h1, h2, h3)-unit with h0 = 3 and h1 = h2 = 2, an (h1, h2)-hub with h1 = h2 = 2. Definition 3.2. (Unit [24]) Given integers h0, h1, h2, h3 > 0, an (h0, h1, h2, h3)-unit M is a graph con￾sisting of a core vertex v, h0 vertex-disjoint (h1, h2)-hubs H(v1), . . . , H(vh0 ) and pairwise disjoint (v, uj)- paths of length at most h3. By the exterior of the unit, denoted Ext(M), we mean Sh0 j=1 S 2(uj). D… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Let $ t\ge s\ge2$ be integers. Confirming a conjecture of Mader, Liu and Montgomery [J. Lond. Math. Soc., 2017] showed that every $K_{s, t}$-free graph with average degree $d$ contains a subdivision of a clique with at least $\Omega(d^{\frac{s}{2(s-1)}})$ vertices. We give an improvement by showing that such a graph contains a balanced subdivision of a clique with the same order, where a balanced subdivision is a subdivision in which each edge is subdivided the same number of times. In 1975, Erd\H{o}s asked whether the sum of the reciprocals of the cycle lengths in a graph with infinite average degree $d$ is necessarily infinite. Recently, Liu and Montgomery [J. Amer. Math. Soc., 2023] confirmed the asymptotically correct lower bound on the reciprocals of the cycle lengths, and provided a lower bound of at least $(\frac{1}{2} -o_d(1)) \log d$. In this paper, we improve this low bound to $\left(\frac{s}{2(s-1)} -o_d(1)\right) \log d$ for $K_{s, t}$-free graphs. Both proofs of our results use the graph sublinear expansion property as well as some novel structural techniques.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper proves two results for K_{s,t}-free graphs (t ≥ s ≥ 2) with average degree d. First, every such graph contains a balanced subdivision of a clique on Ω(d^{s/(2(s-1))}) vertices, strengthening the Liu-Montgomery theorem by requiring that each edge of the clique is subdivided the same number of times. Second, the sum of the reciprocals of all cycle lengths is at least (s/(2(s-1)) - o_d(1)) log d. Both proofs combine the sublinear expansion property with new structural techniques.

Significance. If correct, the results give a quantitatively stronger form of Mader's conjecture in the K_{s,t}-free setting and improve the best-known lower bound on cycle-reciprocal sums for this class of graphs. The balanced-subdivision guarantee is a strictly stronger conclusion than the earlier arbitrary-subdivision result and may enable further applications; the cycle bound is asymptotically sharper than the general-graph ½ log d bound when s is fixed.

minor comments (2)
  1. [title] The title contains the grammatical error 'cycles lengths'; it should read 'cycle lengths'.
  2. [abstract] Abstract, line 8: 'low bound' should be 'lower bound'.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive summary of our results on balanced clique subdivisions and cycle-reciprocal sums in K_{s,t}-free graphs, and for recommending minor revision. No major comments were raised in the report.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation self-contained via novel techniques

full rationale

The paper cites Liu-Montgomery 2017 and 2023 for the base subdivision and cycle-reciprocal results but explicitly invokes new structural techniques (combined with sublinear expansion) to obtain the balanced-subdivision strengthening while keeping the same quantitative order. The cycle-length improvement is derived directly from the new subdivision result. No equations reduce by construction to fitted inputs, no load-bearing self-citation chains, and no ansatz or uniqueness theorem imported from the authors' own prior work. The central claims therefore contain independent content beyond the cited inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The claims rest on the sublinear expansion property (domain assumption) and standard graph-theoretic axioms; no free parameters or invented entities are visible from the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Graphs satisfy the sublinear expansion property
    Invoked explicitly for both proofs in the final sentence of the abstract.
  • standard math Standard axioms and definitions of graph theory and subdivisions
    Background for all statements about K_{s,t}-free graphs, average degree, and subdivisions.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5788 in / 1327 out tokens · 27954 ms · 2026-05-23T23:18:33.972933+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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