On the matching complexes of categorical product of path graphs
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 02:53 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Matching complexes of the categorical product P_n × P_m are homotopy equivalent to wedges of spheres when 3 ≤ m ≤ 5.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The authors show that for n ≥ 2 and 3 ≤ m ≤ 5 the matching complex M(P_n × P_m) is homotopy equivalent to a wedge of spheres. When m equals 3 they compute the exact number and dimension of each sphere in the wedge. When m equals 4 or 5 they give the minimum and maximum dimensions of the spheres that appear.
What carries the argument
The matching complex M(G), the simplicial complex whose faces are the matchings (sets of pairwise disjoint edges) of the graph G.
If this is right
- For m=3 the explicit sphere counts determine the homology groups of the complex in every degree.
- The dimension bounds for m=4 and 5 restrict the possible non-vanishing homology groups.
- The same reduction technique applies uniformly once m is fixed in {3,4,5}, independent of n.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The pattern suggests the homotopy type may simplify to a wedge of spheres for at least one larger value of m.
- The explicit descriptions could be used to compare the topology of categorical products against other graph products such as Cartesian or strong products.
Load-bearing premise
The combinatorial reductions that establish the homotopy equivalence for a fixed small m continue to work without change as n grows arbitrarily large.
What would settle it
An explicit computation of the homology of M(P_n × P_3) for some n larger than those checked in the paper that yields a non-zero group outside the predicted sphere dimensions.
Figures
read the original abstract
The matching complex $\mathsf{M}(G)$ of a graph $G$ is a simplicial complex whose simplices are matchings in $G$. These complexes appear in various places and found applications in many areas of mathematics including computational geometry, representation theory, combinatorics, etc. In this article, we consider the matching complexes of the categorical product $P_n \times P_m$ of path graphs $P_n$ and $P_m$. For $m = 1$, $P_n \times P_m$ is a discrete graph and therefore its matching complex is the void complex. For $m = 2$, $\M(P_n \times P_m)$ has been proved to be homotopy equivalent to a wedge of spheres by Kozlov. We show that for $n \geq 2$ and $3 \leq m \leq 5$, the matching complex of $P_n \times P_m$ is homotopy equivalent to a wedge of spheres. For $m =3$, we explicitly compute the number and dimension of spheres appearing in the wedge. Furthermore, for $m \in \{4, 5\}$, we provide the minimum and maximum dimensions of spheres appearing in the wedge in the homotopy type of $\mathsf{M}(P_n \times P_m)$.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proves that the matching complex M(P_n × P_m) of the categorical product of paths is homotopy equivalent to a wedge of spheres for all n ≥ 2 and m ∈ {3,4,5}. For m=3 an explicit count and dimensions of the spheres are given; for m=4,5 only the minimal and maximal dimensions of the spheres in the wedge are supplied. The argument extends Kozlov’s m=2 case via combinatorial reductions, presumably discrete Morse theory or shellability.
Significance. If correct, the result supplies concrete homotopy information for a family of matching complexes on grid-like graphs, including explicit Betti numbers for m=3. Such data can be used in further topological or representation-theoretic applications of matching complexes.
major comments (1)
- [Proof of the main theorem (m=3 case)] The central claim requires that the acyclic matching (or shelling order) constructed for M(P_n × P_m) pairs every non-critical cell for every n ≥ 2 once m is fixed in {3,4,5}. The abstract and reader’s note indicate this is achieved by combinatorial reductions claimed to be uniform in n; the manuscript must exhibit the explicit local rule or recursive definition and verify that no unpaired cells arise from boundary or periodicity effects when n becomes arbitrarily large.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that applications exist in several fields but supplies only a single reference (Kozlov); a short additional sentence citing one or two further works on matching complexes would improve context.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed report and the recommendation for major revision. The primary concern is the need for greater explicitness in the combinatorial reduction used to establish the acyclic matching for all n ≥ 2. We address this point below and will revise the manuscript to incorporate additional detail.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Proof of the main theorem (m=3 case)] The central claim requires that the acyclic matching (or shelling order) constructed for M(P_n × P_m) pairs every non-critical cell for every n ≥ 2 once m is fixed in {3,4,5}. The abstract and reader’s note indicate this is achieved by combinatorial reductions claimed to be uniform in n; the manuscript must exhibit the explicit local rule or recursive definition and verify that no unpaired cells arise from boundary or periodicity effects when n becomes arbitrarily large.
Authors: The manuscript defines the acyclic matching via a recursive combinatorial reduction on the grid structure of P_n × P_m that is uniform in n: at each step, edges are paired according to a local rule that depends only on the parity and position within the fixed-width strip (m fixed). The proof proceeds by induction on n, showing that the matching is acyclic and that the critical cells are precisely those counted for m=3 (or bounded in dimension for m=4,5). We acknowledge that the local rule is described at a level that may not immediately make the absence of boundary or periodicity artifacts transparent for arbitrary n. In the revision we will add an explicit algorithmic description of the pairing rule together with a separate lemma verifying that, for each fixed m in {3,4,5}, the rule produces no unpaired cells outside the intended critical set when n grows; the argument relies on the fact that the reduction never wraps around and that boundary columns are handled by the same local criterion as interior columns. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Direct combinatorial argument; no circularity
full rationale
The paper claims a homotopy equivalence via discrete Morse theory or shellability reductions that are asserted to hold uniformly for fixed m in {3,4,5} and all n≥2. No quoted step reduces a claimed result to a fitted parameter, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citation chain; the derivation is presented as an independent combinatorial construction. This is the normal case for a self-contained proof paper.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math The categorical product of graphs is the standard one with vertices as pairs and edges when both coordinates are adjacent.
- domain assumption Homotopy equivalence of simplicial complexes can be established by combinatorial methods such as discrete Morse theory.
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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