Tight spectral conditions for the Hamiltonicity of K_(1,r)-free split graphs
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 11:08 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Tight spectral radius bounds suffice to guarantee Hamiltonicity for K_{1,3}-free and K_{1,4}-free split graphs.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For r=3 and r=4 the authors derive explicit lower bounds on the largest eigenvalue of the adjacency matrix such that any K_{1,r}-free split graph meeting the bound must be Hamiltonian. The conditions are shown to be sharp by reference to extremal graphs that attain the bound yet remain non-Hamiltonian, and the proofs combine the known connectivity-to-Hamiltonicity results with standard spectral techniques that bound the size of independent sets or the structure of the split partition.
What carries the argument
The largest eigenvalue (spectral radius) of the adjacency matrix of the graph, used to enforce a minimum degree or connectivity threshold that triggers the known Hamiltonicity criterion for split graphs.
If this is right
- Any K_{1,3}-free split graph whose spectral radius meets the r=3 threshold is Hamiltonian.
- Any K_{1,4}-free split graph whose spectral radius meets the r=4 threshold is Hamiltonian.
- The spectral conditions imply that the graphs are fully cycle extendable, inheriting all the cycle-extension properties already known for Hamiltonian split graphs.
- The same eigenvalue bounds serve as practical certificates that can replace explicit connectivity verification for this restricted class.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same style of spectral bound could be tested for larger r where the connectivity conjecture remains open.
- Because the conditions are eigenvalue-based, they may be easier to verify numerically than combinatorial connectivity for moderately large instances.
- The extremal graphs used to show tightness may themselves suggest new families of non-Hamiltonian split graphs whose spectra can be computed exactly.
Load-bearing premise
That the stated eigenvalue threshold is large enough to force the graph to satisfy the (r-1)-connectivity condition already known to imply Hamiltonicity.
What would settle it
Exhibit a single K_{1,r}-free split graph on n vertices whose largest adjacency eigenvalue meets or exceeds the claimed threshold yet contains no Hamiltonian cycle.
Figures
read the original abstract
The Hamiltonicity and related subjects of split graphs, and in particular $K_{1,r}$-free split graphs with $r\ge 3$ received much attention. Dai et al. [Discrete Math. 345 (2022) 112826] conjectured that every $(r-1)$-connected $K_{1,r}$-free split graph is Hamiltonian. They proved the case when $r=4$, and earlier Renjith and Sadagopan [Int. J. Found. Comput. Sci. 33 (2022) 1--32] proved the case when $r=3$. Recently, Liu, Song, Zhang and Lai [Discrete Math. 346 (2023) 113402] proved that a split graph is Hamiltonian if and only if it is fully cycle extendable. So for $r=3,4$ every $(r-1)$-connected $K_{1,r}$-free split graph is fully cycle extendable. We give tight spectral sufficient conditions for a $K_{1,r}$-free split graph to be Hamiltonian for $r=3,4$.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript establishes tight spectral sufficient conditions for the Hamiltonicity of K_{1,r}-free split graphs when r=3 and r=4. It reduces the problem to known structural theorems (that every (r-1)-connected K_{1,r}-free split graph is Hamiltonian, in fact fully cycle extendable) by proving that the stated lower bounds on the spectral radius force the graph to satisfy the required minimum-degree or connectivity condition on the split partition, using standard Rayleigh-quotient or degree-sequence arguments. Tightness is witnessed by explicit infinite families of non-Hamiltonian examples whose spectral radii approach the proposed thresholds from below.
Significance. If the derivations hold, the paper supplies concrete, falsifiable spectral criteria that directly translate structural Hamiltonicity results into eigenvalue language for a well-studied subclass of split graphs. The explicit thresholds for each r and the matching infinite families of extremal examples constitute a genuine strengthening of the existing literature on spectral Hamiltonicity. The reduction via standard tools (Rayleigh quotients on the clique-independent-set partition) is clean and proportionate to the claim.
minor comments (2)
- The abstract states that 'tight spectral sufficient conditions' are given but does not record the explicit numerical thresholds; adding the precise bounds (one for r=3, one for r=4) would improve immediate readability.
- In the tightness constructions, confirm that the limit of the spectral radii is stated with the same normalization (e.g., divided by n or not) as the sufficient-condition bound itself.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive assessment of our manuscript and the recommendation for minor revision. No specific major comments appear in the report.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The derivation reduces Hamiltonicity of K_{1,r}-free split graphs to the known structural theorem that every (r-1)-connected such graph is Hamiltonian (or equivalently fully cycle extendable), by proving via Rayleigh quotients and degree-sequence arguments that the stated spectral-radius lower bound forces the required minimum degree or connectivity. This spectral implication step is independent of the structural input and uses standard tools; the cited structural results (including one with author overlap) are prior independent theorems, not self-definitions or fits. No equation or claim reduces to its own input by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Graphs are finite, simple, and undirected.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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Y. Zhu, D. Fan, H. Lin, Spectral radius and hamiltonicity in split graphs, Discrete Math. 348 (2025) 114624. Appendix A Proof of Lemma 4.1 Proof.LetI={u 1, u2}andV(K n−2) ={v 1, . . . , vn−2}in Γ ′ n,2 and Γ′′ n,2. We first show thatρ(Γn,2)> ρ(Γ ′′ n,2). LetN Γ′′ n,2(u2) ={v n−2}. Thenv i ∈N Γ′′ n,2(u1) fori= 1, . . . , n−3. Denote byxthe Perron vector of...
work page 2025
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[16]
=az ′ 1 + (n−2a−7)z ′ 2 >0 andρ(G ′)(z′ 7 −z ′
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[17]
Note thatρ(Γ ∗ n,|I|)(x7 −x 8) =x 3
= (n−2a−7)z ′ 2 +z ′ 3 >0, we havez ′ 5 −z ′ 6 >0 andz ′ 7 −z ′ 6 >0. Note thatρ(Γ ∗ n,|I|)(x7 −x 8) =x 3. Then z′⊤ ρ(G′)−ρ(Γ ∗ n,|I|) x = X v∈V2\{v2} (xvz′ v5 +x 5zv −x vz′ v7 −x 7zv) +x 3z′ v8 +x 8z′ v3 −x 3z′ v7 −x 7z′ v3 = (n−2a−7)(x 2z′ 5 +x 5z′ 2 −x 2z′ 6 −x 7z′
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[18]
+x 3z′ 7 +x 8z′ 3 −x 3z′ 6 −x 7z′ 3 = (n−2a−7)(x 2(z′ 5 −z ′
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[19]
+ (x8 −x 7)z′ 3 = (n−2a−7)(x 2(z′ 5 −z ′
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[20]
Thusρ(Γ n,|I|)> ρ(Γ ∗ n,|I|) asG ′ ∼= Γn,|I|
+ n−2a−7 ρ(G′) x3z′ 2 + 1 ρ(G′) − 1 ρ(Γ∗ n,|I|) ! x3z′ 3, i.e., ρ(G′)−ρ(Γ ∗ n,|I|) z′⊤x+ x3z′ 3 ρ(G′)ρ(Γ∗ n,|I|) ! >0, soρ(G ′)> ρ(Γ ∗ n,|I|). Thusρ(Γ n,|I|)> ρ(Γ ∗ n,|I|) asG ′ ∼= Γn,|I|. 29
discussion (0)
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