Block-avoiding point sequencings of arbitrary length in Steiner triple systems
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 00:10 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Every Steiner triple system on enough points admits a sequencing of its points that avoids any block in ℓ consecutive positions, for any fixed ℓ at least 3.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For every integer ℓ ≥ 3 there exists an ℓ-good sequencing of any STS(v) provided v is sufficiently large. The authors also establish new nonexistence results for ℓ-good sequencings in certain smaller or specially structured STS(v).
What carries the argument
An ℓ-good sequencing, defined as a permutation of the point set in which no block is contained in any ℓ consecutive positions.
If this is right
- Every sufficiently large STS(v) possesses at least one ℓ-good sequencing for each fixed ℓ ≥ 3.
- The existence holds uniformly across all nonisomorphic STS(v) of large order rather than only for particular families.
- Certain small-order or specially constructed STS(v) lack ℓ-good sequencings, as shown by the new nonexistence results.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The threshold on v may be made effective by replacing the asymptotic counting arguments with explicit constructions once the necessary inequalities are verified.
- The same avoidance property may extend to other linear spaces or pairwise balanced designs whose block size is fixed.
- Such sequencings could be used to produce orderings that control the appearance of triples in any window of fixed length.
Load-bearing premise
That the number of points v can be taken large enough depending only on the fixed length ℓ.
What would settle it
An explicit STS(v) with v exceeding the paper's threshold that admits no ℓ-good sequencing for some ℓ ≥ 3.
read the original abstract
An $\ell$-good sequencing of an STS$(v)$ is a permutation of the points of the design such that no $\ell$ consecutive points in this permutation contain a block of the design. We prove that, for every integer $\ell \geq 3$, there is an $\ell$-good sequencing of any STS$(v)$ provided that $v$ is sufficiently large. We also prove some new nonexistence results for $\ell$-good sequencings of STS$(v)$.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper defines an ℓ-good sequencing of an STS(v) as a permutation of its points such that no block is contained in any ℓ consecutive positions. It proves that for every fixed integer ℓ ≥ 3 there exists V(ℓ) such that every Steiner triple system of order v ≥ V(ℓ) admits an ℓ-good sequencing; the argument relies on asymptotic combinatorial constructions permitted by the “sufficiently large” hypothesis. The manuscript also establishes several new non-existence results for small v.
Significance. If the existence proof is correct, the result gives a uniform asymptotic answer to the block-avoiding sequencing problem for arbitrary fixed length ℓ, extending earlier work that treated only bounded ℓ or special families of STS. The explicit non-existence statements for small orders complement the main theorem and clarify the boundary of the asymptotic regime.
minor comments (2)
- [Introduction / Theorem statement] The statement of the main theorem (presumably Theorem 1.1 or the result in §3) should explicitly record the dependence of V(ℓ) on ℓ, even if only as an existence claim, to make the quantifiers fully transparent.
- [Non-existence results] In the non-existence section, the small-order examples would benefit from a short table listing the forbidden (v,ℓ) pairs together with the reason (e.g., parity, divisibility, or exhaustive search).
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive summary, significance assessment, and recommendation to accept the manuscript. No major comments were raised in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; standard asymptotic existence proof
full rationale
The paper establishes an existence result: for each fixed ℓ ≥ 3 there is a V(ℓ) such that every STS(v) with v ≥ V(ℓ) admits an ℓ-good sequencing. The argument relies on combinatorial constructions and counting arguments that become viable only for sufficiently large v, which is explicitly part of the theorem statement. No equations reduce a claimed prediction to a fitted parameter by construction, no self-citation chain is load-bearing for the central claim, and the derivation does not rename or smuggle in prior results via ansatz. The nonexistence results for small v are consistent with the asymptotic qualifier and introduce no internal inconsistency. The proof is self-contained against external combinatorial benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Steiner triple systems STS(v) exist precisely when v ≡ 1 or 3 mod 6
- domain assumption Combinatorial constructions or counting arguments become available once v exceeds a threshold depending on ℓ
discussion (0)
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