Linked partition ideals, directed graphs and q-multi-summations
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 21:38 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Directed graphs with an empty vertex yield a q-difference system whose factorization into q-multi-summations proves Andrews-Gordon identities for linked partition ideals.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The generating function of directed graphs possessing an empty vertex satisfies a q-difference system. Solving the system amounts to factoring a column functional vector whose components are q-multi-summations; these summations obey a recurrence that directly supplies the desired generating-function identities for the linked partition ideals under study.
What carries the argument
The q-difference system obtained from the generating function of directed graphs with an empty vertex, solved by factorization into column vectors of q-multi-summations.
If this is right
- Selected Andrews-Gordon type identities receive direct proofs that rely only on the recurrence for q-multi-summations.
- The generating functions of linked partition ideals are placed in explicit correspondence with the enumeration of directed graphs containing an empty vertex.
- Binary trees furnish a combinatorial interpretation that organises the steps of the factorization.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same graph-to-factorization pipeline may apply to other families of partition ideals once an appropriate empty-vertex generating function is identified.
- The binary-tree connection could be used to produce recursive visualisations or counting arguments for the q-multi-summations themselves.
- Because the method avoids computer search, it may be adaptable to identities whose computer-assisted proofs are already known but whose manual derivations remain open.
Load-bearing premise
The q-difference system derived from the graph generating function admits a factorization into column vectors of q-multi-summations that satisfy the recurrence required by the linked partition ideals.
What would settle it
An explicit counter-example in which the recurrence for the q-multi-summations fails to reproduce the known generating function for one of the linked partition ideals considered in the paper.
Figures
read the original abstract
Finding an Andrews--Gordon type generating function identity for a linked partition ideal is difficult in most cases. In this paper, we will handle this problem in the setting of graph theory. With the generating function of directed graphs with an ``empty'' vertex, we then turn our attention to a $q$-difference system. This $q$-difference system eventually yields a factorization problem of a special type of column functional vectors involving $q$-multi-summations. Finally, using a recurrence relation satisfied by certain $q$-multi-summations, we are able to provide non-computer-assisted proofs of some Andrews--Gordon type generating function identities. These proofs also have an interesting connection with binary trees.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript develops a graph-theoretic approach to Andrews-Gordon type generating function identities for linked partition ideals. Starting from the generating function of directed graphs with an empty vertex, it derives a q-difference system that leads to a factorization problem for column functional vectors involving q-multi-summations. A recurrence relation for these summations is then used to obtain non-computer-assisted proofs of the identities, with an additional connection to binary trees.
Significance. If the derivations hold, the work provides a systematic method for proving partition identities using directed graphs and q-series techniques, potentially extending to other identities and offering insights into the structure of linked partition ideals. The emphasis on non-computer-assisted proofs and the explicit link to binary trees are notable strengths.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the description of the pipeline from graph generating functions to the q-difference system and factorization is high-level; explicit statements of the q-difference equations, the form of the column vectors, and the recurrence would strengthen the abstract.
- The connection to binary trees is mentioned but not elaborated in the provided description; a brief indication of how the trees arise from the graph model or recurrence would improve clarity.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive summary of our manuscript and for recommending minor revision. We appreciate the recognition of the graph-theoretic approach to Andrews-Gordon identities and the emphasis on non-computer-assisted proofs.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity identified
full rationale
The derivation begins with the generating function of directed graphs with an empty vertex, produces a q-difference system, factors column functional vectors whose entries are q-multi-summations, and invokes a recurrence satisfied by those summations to obtain the target Andrews-Gordon identities. None of these steps is shown to reduce by definition or by self-citation to the identities themselves; the pipeline is presented as a forward construction from the graph model. No load-bearing self-citation, fitted-input-as-prediction, or ansatz-smuggling is visible in the abstract or described method, so the argument remains self-contained.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption The generating function of directed graphs with an empty vertex satisfies a q-difference system that factors into q-multi-summation vectors.
- domain assumption Certain q-multi-summations obey a recurrence relation sufficient to recover the Andrews-Gordon identities.
Reference graph
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