One extra edge forces Berge pancyclicity
Pith reviewed 2026-06-27 09:04 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Any Hamiltonian Berge cycle plus one extra edge yields Berge cycles of every length from 2 to n in large r-uniform hypergraphs.
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 the edges of any Hamiltonian Berge cycle in a simple n-vertex r-uniform hypergraph, together with any one additional edge, contain Berge cycles of every length from 2 to n, for all sufficiently large n with r = floor((n-1)/2). In odd order we prove a stronger prescribed-unused-edge theorem using rigidity of large subsets of odd cyclic groups and an alternating matching exchange. In even order we introduce a two-gap edge-reassignment method. Split locks cover all lengths outside a seven-term middle band. The absence of the central length forces an exact reflected translation-wave structure, which is eliminated by an additive covering theorem derived from sum-free stability. The
What carries the argument
the edges of a Hamiltonian Berge cycle together with one additional edge in an r-uniform hypergraph
If this is right
- Berge cycles of every length from 2 to n exist within the given edges.
- In the odd-order case the result continues to hold even when one specific edge is required to remain unused.
- Lengths outside a central band of seven consecutive values are covered by split-lock constructions.
- The central length, if missing, produces a reflected translation-wave structure that is ruled out by the additive covering theorem.
- Near-central lengths are obtained from a two-defect recurrence combined with bounded-run forcing.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same one-extra-edge principle might hold for smaller values of n that can be checked by computer search.
- The stability methods drawn from sum-free sets could be reused for other minimal-edge problems in hypergraph cycle theory.
- Analogous statements may apply to non-uniform hypergraphs or to directed versions of Berge cycles.
- The result indicates that Berge pancyclicity is a robust property once a single extra edge is present, potentially informing constructions in design theory.
Load-bearing premise
n must be large enough that the rigidity of large subsets of odd cyclic groups and the matching exchange methods hold without exception.
What would settle it
An r-uniform hypergraph on some sufficiently large n, containing a Hamiltonian Berge cycle and one extra edge, that misses a Berge cycle of some length k with 2 less than or equal to k less than or equal to n would serve as a counterexample.
read the original abstract
We resolve a question of Bailey, Hollars, Li and Luo. For all sufficiently large $n$, let $r=\lfloor(n-1)/2\rfloor$. We prove that the edges of any Hamiltonian Berge cycle in a simple $n$-vertex $r$-uniform hypergraph, together with any one additional edge, contain Berge cycles of every length from $2$ to $n$. In odd order we prove a stronger prescribed-unused-edge theorem using rigidity of large subsets of odd cyclic groups and an alternating matching exchange. In even order we introduce a two-gap edge-reassignment method. Split locks cover all lengths outside a seven-term middle band. The absence of the central length forces an exact reflected translation-wave structure, which is eliminated by an additive covering theorem derived from sum-free stability. The remaining near-central lengths follow from a two-defect recurrence and bounded-run forcing.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proves that for all sufficiently large n, with r = floor((n-1)/2), the edges of any Hamiltonian Berge cycle in a simple n-vertex r-uniform hypergraph, together with any one additional edge, contain Berge cycles of every length from 2 to n. The argument splits into odd-order and even-order cases. In odd order a stronger prescribed-unused-edge theorem is proved via rigidity of large subsets of odd cyclic groups and alternating matching exchange. In even order a two-gap edge-reassignment method is introduced. Split locks handle lengths outside a seven-term middle band; the absence of the central length forces a reflected translation-wave structure eliminated by an additive covering theorem derived from sum-free stability; near-central lengths follow from a two-defect recurrence and bounded-run forcing.
Significance. The result resolves a question posed by Bailey, Hollars, Li and Luo. It supplies a self-contained combinatorial proof that combines tools from additive combinatorics (sum-free stability) with direct hypergraph arguments (rigidity, matching exchange, gap reassignment). The stronger odd-order statement with a prescribed unused edge is a notable strengthening. The architecture is conditioned on sufficiently large n, which is the standard setting for the invoked stability and rigidity lemmas.
minor comments (3)
- The abstract states that the additive covering theorem is 'derived from sum-free stability' but does not indicate whether the derivation is self-contained or cites an external result; a brief sentence clarifying this would aid readers.
- The seven-term middle band is mentioned without an explicit numerical range; stating the precise interval (e.g., lengths k with |k - n/2| ≤ 3) would make the split-lock argument easier to follow.
- The manuscript uses the phrase 'for all sufficiently large n' repeatedly; an explicit lower bound on n (even if large) or a remark on how the constants arise from the stability lemmas would strengthen the statement.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive assessment and recommendation of minor revision. No major comments appear in the report, so we have no specific points requiring response or revision.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained combinatorial case analysis
full rationale
The paper presents a direct proof via case splits (split locks outside a central band, reflected translation-wave elimination via an additive covering theorem, two-defect recurrence for near-central lengths), with separate handling for odd and even order using rigidity of odd cyclic groups, alternating matching exchange, and two-gap reassignment. These steps are conditioned on sufficiently large n for external stability and rigidity lemmas to apply, but no load-bearing step reduces by construction to a fitted parameter, self-definition, or self-citation chain. The additive covering theorem is derived from sum-free stability (standard external input), and the central claim does not rename or presuppose its own output. No equations or definitions are shown to be equivalent by fiat. This is the normal honest outcome for a self-contained combinatorial argument.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard properties of cyclic groups, matchings, and sum-free sets in additive combinatorics
Reference graph
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