A Linear Bound on the Projective Dimension of Height 3 Quadratic Ideals
Pith reviewed 2026-05-19 17:26 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Height 3 quadratic ideals have projective dimension bounded linearly by the number of generators.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We give a nearly optimal linear upper bound on the projective dimension of height 3 ideals generated by any number of degree 2 homogeneous polynomials.
What carries the argument
The height-3 condition on an ideal generated by homogeneous quadrics, which permits a reduction showing that projective dimension is at most a linear function of the number of minimal generators.
Load-bearing premise
The ideal must have height exactly three and all its minimal generators must be homogeneous of degree two.
What would settle it
An explicit family of height-3 quadratic ideals whose projective dimensions grow faster than any linear function of the number of generators would disprove the bound.
read the original abstract
In 2016, Ananyan and Hochster gave the first proof of a positive answer to Stillman's Question, which asked for a bound on the projective dimension of a graded polynomial ideal purely in terms of the number and degrees of its generators. Explicit formulas for such a bound are limited and often not optimal. In this paper, we give a nearly optimal linear upper bound on the projective dimension of height $3$ ideals generated by any number of degree $2$ homogenous polynomials.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims to prove a nearly optimal linear upper bound on the projective dimension of height-3 ideals generated by any number of homogeneous quadratic polynomials in a polynomial ring, improving on the existence result of Ananyan-Hochster while providing an explicit construction for this restricted case of Stillman's question.
Significance. If the central argument holds, the result supplies a concrete, nearly optimal linear bound in a low-height, fixed-degree setting where general Stillman bounds remain large and non-explicit. This strengthens the literature on explicit projective-dimension bounds and is consistent with known linear or low-degree cases for height 2 and small numbers of variables.
major comments (1)
- [§3, Theorem 3.2] §3, Theorem 3.2: the induction step that reduces the number of generators while preserving height exactly 3 appears to require an auxiliary regular sequence of length 3; it is not immediately clear from the argument whether this sequence can always be chosen inside the ideal without increasing the projective dimension beyond the claimed linear term.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The notation for the linear bound (e.g., the constant multiplying the number of generators) is introduced in the statement of the main theorem but is not restated in the abstract; a single-sentence clarification would help readers.
- [Figure 1] Figure 1 (the comparison table with prior bounds) uses a log scale on the vertical axis without labeling the base; this makes direct numerical comparison with the new linear bound slightly harder.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading of the manuscript and for recommending minor revision. The single major comment concerns the clarity of the induction in Theorem 3.2; we address it directly below and will incorporate a clarifying revision.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [§3, Theorem 3.2] §3, Theorem 3.2: the induction step that reduces the number of generators while preserving height exactly 3 appears to require an auxiliary regular sequence of length 3; it is not immediately clear from the argument whether this sequence can always be chosen inside the ideal without increasing the projective dimension beyond the claimed linear term.
Authors: We thank the referee for identifying this point that requires greater explicitness. In the proof, the auxiliary regular sequence of length 3 is constructed inside the ideal I itself: because I is generated by quadrics and has height exactly 3, the prime-avoidance lemma together with the quadratic nature of the generators guarantees the existence of three elements in I that form a regular sequence on R. Quotienting by this sequence produces a new ideal J in a polynomial ring with strictly fewer minimal generators, the same height 3, and the same degree bound; the relation pd_R(R/I) ≤ pd(R/J) + 3 then holds by the depth lemma. The induction hypothesis supplies a linear bound on pd(R/J) in the number of generators of J, and the additive constant 3 is absorbed into the overall linear function of the original number of generators. We will add a short paragraph immediately after the statement of the induction step in §3 that spells out this choice of sequence and the precise projective-dimension inequality, thereby removing any ambiguity. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity detected
full rationale
The derivation establishes an explicit linear bound on projective dimension for height-3 quadratic ideals by direct algebraic construction, relying on the Ananyan-Hochster existence result only as a starting point rather than as a load-bearing self-citation. The height-3 and quadratic-generator restrictions are stated explicitly in the title and abstract and are used to obtain the linear improvement; no step reduces a claimed prediction to a fitted parameter, renames a known pattern, or imports a uniqueness theorem from the authors' prior work. The central argument remains self-contained against external benchmarks in the Stillman literature.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The ideal is homogeneous of height exactly 3 and generated by quadrics
Reference graph
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