Sign Patterns of Orthogonal Matrices and the Strong Inner Product Property
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 17:18 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The strong inner product property on sign patterns permits construction of infinite families of row orthogonal matrices.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A sign pattern has the strong inner product property when every pair of distinct rows satisfies a combinatorial inner-product condition that forces the existence of real numbers realizing those signs while keeping the rows orthogonal; the authors prove that any sign pattern meeting this property allows a row orthogonal matrix, and they use the property to generate infinite families of allowable sign patterns.
What carries the argument
The strong inner product property, a combinatorial condition on the signs in a matrix that is sufficient for the existence of a row orthogonal realization.
If this is right
- Infinite families of sign patterns that allow row orthogonality become constructible.
- Verification of the property can be performed by finite algorithmic checks.
- The same verification methods produce a natural generalization of the property itself.
- The combinatorial structure of row orthogonal matrices becomes more accessible through explicit sign-pattern constructions.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The algorithmic checks may scale to decide row orthogonality for sign patterns outside the families constructed here.
- Similar combinatorial conditions could be formulated for sign patterns of matrices with other orthogonality-like relations such as conference matrices.
- The families may supply test cases for conjectures on the minimum number of nonzero entries needed for row orthogonal sign patterns.
Load-bearing premise
That satisfaction of the strong inner product property is enough to guarantee a real row orthogonal matrix exists with exactly those signs.
What would settle it
A concrete sign pattern that meets the strong inner product property yet admits no row orthogonal matrix over the reals.
read the original abstract
A new condition, the strong inner product property, is introduced and used to construct sign patterns of row orthogonal matrices. Using this property, infinite families of sign patterns allowing row orthogonality are found. These provide insight into the underlying combinatorial structure of row orthogonal matrices. Algorithmic techniques for verifying that a matrix has the strong inner product property are also presented. These techniques lead to a generalization of the strong inner product property and can be easily implemented using various software.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper introduces the strong inner product property as a new sufficient combinatorial condition on sign patterns that guarantees realizability by a row-orthogonal matrix. It applies the property to construct explicit infinite families of sign patterns allowing row orthogonality and develops algorithmic techniques for verifying the property, which in turn yield a generalization of the condition.
Significance. If the central claims hold, the work supplies a new combinatorial tool for analyzing sign patterns of orthogonal matrices and explicit constructions that illuminate the underlying structure. The algorithmic verification methods and generalization are practical contributions that could support computational exploration in combinatorial matrix theory.
minor comments (3)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that the techniques 'can be easily implemented using various software,' but the manuscript should include at least one concrete pseudocode listing or complexity bound for the verification algorithm to make this claim verifiable.
- Notation for sign patterns and the inner-product condition is introduced without explicit comparison to existing sign-pattern literature (e.g., the standard qualitative class or sign nonsingularity conditions); a short paragraph relating the new property to prior work would improve readability.
- The generalization of the strong inner product property is mentioned as a consequence of the algorithmic techniques, yet the precise statement of the generalized condition appears only after the algorithms; moving the definition earlier would clarify the logical flow.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive summary, significance assessment, and recommendation of minor revision. The report contains no enumerated major comments to address point by point.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper defines a new combinatorial condition (the strong inner product property) and uses it to construct explicit infinite families of sign patterns that allow row orthogonality. No step reduces a claimed prediction or existence result to a fitted parameter, self-citation chain, or definitional tautology; the central sufficiency argument is presented as a direct combinatorial verification independent of the target matrices. This is the normal case of a self-contained construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Basic axioms of real inner product spaces and row orthogonality (unit norm rows with pairwise zero dot products)
invented entities (1)
-
strong inner product property
no independent evidence
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
M. Fiedler, Problem 12, in: Proceedings: Theory of Graphs and It s Ap- plication, Publishing House of the Czechoslovakia Academy of Science s, Prague, 1964, p. 160
work page 1964
-
[2]
L. B. Beasley, R. A. Brualdi, B. L. Shader, Combinatorial and Gra ph- Theoretical Problems in Linear Algebra, Vol. IMA Vol. Math. Appl. 50, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1993, Ch. Combinatorial Orthogonalit y, pp. 207 – 218
work page 1993
-
[3]
L. B. Beasley, D. Scully, Y. Sun, Linear operators which preserv e combi- natorial orthogonality, Lin. Alg. Appl. 201 (1994) 171 – 180
work page 1994
-
[4]
W. Barrett, S. Fallat, H. T. Hall, L. Hogben, J. C.-H. Lin, B. L. Sha der, Generalizations of the Strong Arnold Property and the minimum numb er of distinct eigenvalues of a graph, The Electronic Journal of Combin atorics 24 (2) (2017)
work page 2017
-
[5]
The inverse eigenvalue problem of a graph: Multiplicities and minors
W. Barrett, S. Butler, S. M. Fallat, H. T. Hall, L. Hogben, J. C.-H. Lin, B. L. Shader, M. Young, The inverse eigenvalue problem of a graph: Mul- tiplicities and minors, ArXiv e-prints (Jul. 2017). arXiv:1708.00064
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2017
-
[6]
G.-S. Cheon, S.-G. Hwang, S.-H. Rim, B. L. Shader, S.-Z. Song, Sp arse orthogonal matrices, Linear Algebra and its Applications 373 (2003 ) 211 – 222, combinatorial Matrix Theory Conference (Pohang, 2002). 29
work page 2003
-
[7]
Y. Gao, L. Shao, Y. Sun, ± sign pattern matrices that allow orthogonality, Czech Math J 56 (3) (2006) 969 – 979
work page 2006
-
[8]
C. R. Johnson, C. Waters, S. Pierce, Sign patterns occurring in orthogonal matrices, Linear and Multilinear Algebra 44 (4) (1998) 287–299
work page 1998
-
[9]
C. Waters, Sign pattern matrices that allow orthogonality, Linea r Algebra and its Applications 235 (1996) 1 – 13
work page 1996
-
[10]
H. van der Holst, L. Lov´ asz, A. Schrijver, The colin de verdi` ere graph parameter, Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies 7 (1999) 29 – 85
work page 1999
-
[11]
J. M. Lee, Introduction to Smooth Manifolds, 2nd Edition, Sprin ger, 2013
work page 2013
- [12]
-
[13]
R. F. Bailey, R. Craigen, On orthogonal matrices with zero diago nal, ArXiv e-prints (Oct. 2018). arXiv:1810.08961
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2018
-
[14]
A. F. Ahmadi, M. S. Cavers, S. Fallat, K. Meagher, S. Nasseras r, Minimum number of distinct eigenvalues of graphs, Delectron. J. Linear Alge bra 26 (2013) 673 – 691
work page 2013
-
[15]
B. A. Curtis, B. L. Shader, SIPP-Algorithms (2019). URL https://github.com/U-Wyoming-Math/SIPP-Algorithms 30
work page 2019
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.