2-colourability of the maximum ranked elements of a combinatorially sphere-like ranked poset
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 17:13 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
In a combinatorially sphere-like ranked poset of rank k, even coverings of each rank-(k-2) element imply that the maximum-ranked elements form a bipartite graph.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We prove that, in a combinatorially sphere-like ranked poset S of rank k, if each element of rank (k-2) is covered by an even number of elements, then the maximum ranked elements of S admit a proper 2-colouring, i.e., any two adjacent maximum ranked elements have different colours.
What carries the argument
The combinatorially sphere-like property on a ranked poset, which encodes the incidence and covering relations that mimic those of a combinatorial sphere, together with the even-covering condition at rank k-2 that forces the dual graph on rank-k elements to be bipartite.
If this is right
- The adjacency graph on the maximum-ranked elements is bipartite.
- The result recovers the classical 2-face-colorability of even-degree polygonal 2-spheres as the k=2 case.
- Any two combinatorial spheres or sphere-like complexes obeying the even-covering hypothesis inherit the same 2-colorability at their highest rank.
- The color classes partition the top elements into two sets with no internal adjacencies.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Verification of the even-covering condition could replace direct construction of the top-layer graph for deciding bipartiteness in large posets.
- The theorem suggests that sphere-like posets with the even condition may admit consistent global orientations or dualities that are absent when coverings are odd.
- Similar parity conditions might extend to colorability questions for lower ranks or for other chromatic numbers in the same poset class.
Load-bearing premise
The poset must satisfy the newly introduced combinatorially sphere-like axioms that generalize combinatorial spheres.
What would settle it
A combinatorially sphere-like ranked poset of rank k in which every rank-(k-2) element is covered evenly yet two adjacent rank-k elements share the same color in every attempted 2-coloring of the top layer would falsify the claim.
read the original abstract
We obtain a higher dimensional analogue of a classical theorem which states that a polygonally cellulated $2$-sphere in $\mathbb{R}^3$, such that each vertex has even degree, is $2$-face-colourable. In order to formulate our result, we introduce the notion of combinatorially sphere-like ranked posets, which are ranked posets that generalise combinatorial spheres. We prove that, in a combinatorially sphere-like ranked poset $S$ of rank $k$, if each element of rank $(k-2)$ is covered by an even number of elements, then the maximum ranked elements of $S$ admit a proper $2$-colouring, i.e., any two adjacent maximum ranked elements have different colours.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript introduces the notion of combinatorially sphere-like ranked posets, which generalize combinatorial spheres, and proves that in such a poset S of rank k, if each element of rank (k-2) is covered by an even number of elements, then the maximum-ranked (rank-k) elements admit a proper 2-coloring in which any two adjacent elements receive different colors. This is framed as a higher-dimensional analogue of the classical result on 2-face-colorability of even-degree polygonally cellulated 2-spheres.
Significance. If the result holds, the work supplies a combinatorial generalization of a classical sphere-coloring theorem to a new class of ranked posets, with potential applications in topological combinatorics and poset theory. The explicit definition of the combinatorially sphere-like property and the deployment of the even-covering hypothesis inside a parity or inductive argument constitute the central technical contribution; the manuscript supplies the required axioms and deploys them without internal inconsistency.
minor comments (2)
- [Introduction] The introduction would benefit from one or two additional sentences situating the new definition relative to existing notions of combinatorial spheres or ranked posets with sphere-like properties (e.g., those appearing in the literature on shellable posets or Cohen-Macaulay complexes).
- [§2] Notation for the covering relation and adjacency among rank-k elements should be introduced once and used consistently; a short notational table or diagram in §2 would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive summary, assessment of significance, and recommendation of minor revision. No specific major comments were raised in the report.
Circularity Check
No circularity: direct proof from new definition plus even-covering hypothesis
full rationale
The manuscript defines combinatorially sphere-like ranked posets via explicit axioms that generalize combinatorial spheres, then applies the even-covering condition at rank k-2 inside a parity/inductive argument to obtain proper 2-coloring of the rank-k elements. No parameter is fitted to data and then renamed a prediction, no self-citation chain supplies the central uniqueness or ansatz, and the derivation does not reduce any claimed result to its own inputs by construction. The classical 2-sphere theorem is invoked only as motivation, not as a load-bearing self-referential step.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard axioms of ranked posets, covering relations, and adjacency of maximal elements.
invented entities (1)
-
combinatorially sphere-like ranked poset
no independent evidence
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
Manoj K. Chari. On discrete Morse functions and combinatorial decompositions.Discrete Mathematics, 217(1):101–113, 2000.doi:10.1016/S0012-365X(99)00258-7
-
[2]
M Michael Cohen.A Course in Simple-Homotopy Theory. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Springer, New York, NY, April 1973.doi:10.1007/978-1-4684-9372-6
-
[3]
Reinhard Diestel.Graph theory. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Springer, Berlin, Germany, 6 edition, December 2024.doi:10.1007/978-3-662-70107-2
-
[4]
Advances in Mathe matics 134(1), 90–145 (1998), https://doi.org/10.1006/aima.1997.1650
Robin Forman. Morse theory for cell complexes.Advances in Mathematics, 134(1):90–145, 1998.doi:0.1006/aima.1997.1650
-
[5]
Robin Forman. A user’s guide to discrete Morse theory.S´ eminaire Lotharingien de Combi- natoire [electronic only], 48:B48c–35, 2002. 9
work page 2002
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.