Fixed-density profiles for the semi-induced 4-vertex star
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 07:45 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
For every fixed red edge density β the extremal densities of the semi-induced star S_{2,1} are given by a completed four-branch upper profile and a one-parameter three-class lower family.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For every fixed red edge density β∈[0,1] both the upper and lower extremal S_{2,1}-densities are determined. The upper extremal function is the four-branch profile obtained by adjoining the low-density case to the known range β≥1/4. The lower extremal function is realized by a one-parameter three-class complement-split family rather than by the natural endpoint constructions coming from quasi-stars and quasi-cliques.
What carries the argument
Transfer argument with degree-square tie-breaking that reduces the extremal problem to almost-regular, threshold and finite-staircase optimizations.
If this is right
- The conjectured four-branch upper profile holds for every β in [0,1].
- The minimum S_{2,1} density is attained by the one-parameter three-class complement-split family for every β.
- Quasi-star and quasi-clique constructions do not achieve the global minimum at every density.
- Extremal analysis of this semi-induced functional reduces to a finite collection of explicit optimization problems.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same reduction technique may determine fixed-density profiles for other small semi-induced graphs.
- The appearance of an interior three-class family suggests that optimal constructions for related inducibility problems may require more than two parts.
- The explicit parametrization of the lower family supplies concrete test graphs for numerical checks of the claimed minimum.
Load-bearing premise
The degree-square tie-breaking step in the transfer argument identifies all graphs that could attain the claimed extremal values.
What would settle it
An explicit n-vertex graph with red edge density β whose S_{2,1} density lies strictly below the value attained by the three-class complement-split family at that β would falsify the lower bound.
read the original abstract
We study the fixed-density semi-inducibility profiles of the red-blue star $S_{2,1}$, which has one distinguished center, two red edges and one blue edge. For an $n$-vertex graph $G$, let $N(S_{2,1},G)$ be the number of injective labeled copies in which the two red edges of $S_{2,1}$ are mapped to edges of $G$ and its blue edge is mapped to a non-edge of $G$, that is, \begin{align*} N(S_{2,1},G)= \sum_{v\in V(G)} d(v)(d(v)-1)(n-1-d(v)). \end{align*} For every fixed red edge density $\beta\in[0,1]$, we determine both extremal $S_{2,1}$-densities. On the upper side, we prove the missing low-density range and, together with the theorem of Balogh, Lidick\'y, Mubayi, Pfender and Volec for $\beta\ge 1/4$, obtain the full four-branch profile predicted in their work. On the lower side, we show that the natural endpoint profile coming from the quasi-star and quasi-clique constructions is not universal; the correct minimum is given by a one-parameter three-class complement-split family. The proofs use a transfer argument with degree-square tie-breaking, reducing the extremal analysis to almost-regular, threshold and finite-staircase optimizations.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript determines the extremal semi-induced densities of the 4-vertex star S_{2,1} (with two red edges and one blue non-edge) for every fixed red-edge density β ∈ [0,1]. On the upper side it completes the low-density regime β < 1/4 via a transfer argument with degree-square tie-breaking, yielding the full four-branch profile when combined with the Balogh-Lidický-Mubayi-Pfender-Volec theorem for β ≥ 1/4. On the lower side it exhibits a one-parameter three-class complement-split family that strictly improves on the quasi-star and quasi-clique constructions and claims to realize the global minimum.
Significance. If the central reduction holds, the work supplies the first complete fixed-density profile for this semi-induced star, correcting the lower envelope and confirming the conjectured upper envelope. The explicit one-parameter family and the transfer reduction to almost-regular, threshold and finite-staircase graphs constitute concrete methodological progress in the area of semi-induced extremal problems.
major comments (2)
- [Section 3] Transfer argument (Section 3, the degree-square tie-breaking step): the reduction is asserted to preserve or monotonically control the S_{2,1} density while fixing β exactly (or up to o(1)); an explicit error bound or monotonicity lemma for configurations with β < 1/4 is required, because this step is load-bearing for both the four-branch upper profile and the claim that only almost-regular/threshold/finite-staircase graphs need be optimized.
- [Section 4] Lower-profile family (Section 4, the three-class complement-split construction): the optimization establishing that this family is minimal for all β must include a direct analytic comparison showing its S_{2,1} density lies strictly below the quasi-star/quasi-clique envelope on a positive-measure set of β; without this comparison the claim that the natural endpoint profile is not universal remains incomplete.
minor comments (2)
- [Introduction] The term 'finite-staircase graphs' is used in the abstract and introduction but is not defined until later; a one-sentence definition or reference in the introduction would improve readability.
- Notation for the three-class complement-split graphs (e.g., the parameter controlling the split sizes) should be introduced once and used consistently in all density formulas.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the thorough reading and constructive suggestions. The two major comments identify places where the presentation can be strengthened with more explicit statements. We will revise the manuscript accordingly to incorporate the requested bounds and comparisons while preserving the core arguments.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Section 3] Transfer argument (Section 3, the degree-square tie-breaking step): the reduction is asserted to preserve or monotonically control the S_{2,1} density while fixing β exactly (or up to o(1)); an explicit error bound or monotonicity lemma for configurations with β < 1/4 is required, because this step is load-bearing for both the four-branch upper profile and the claim that only almost-regular/threshold/finite-staircase graphs need be optimized.
Authors: We agree that an explicit monotonicity statement would improve clarity. In the revised manuscript we will insert a new lemma (Lemma 3.4) immediately after the description of the degree-square tie-breaking procedure. The lemma states that for any graph G with edge density β < 1/4, the transfer operation changes the S_{2,1} density by at most C/n for an absolute constant C, while keeping the edge density exactly β. The proof proceeds by direct expansion of the degree-sum expression and bounding the quadratic discrepancy terms; the resulting O(1/n) error is uniform on the interval β ∈ [0,1/4). This lemma directly justifies the reduction to almost-regular, threshold, and finite-staircase graphs used in the subsequent optimization. revision: yes
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Referee: [Section 4] Lower-profile family (Section 4, the three-class complement-split construction): the optimization establishing that this family is minimal for all β must include a direct analytic comparison showing its S_{2,1} density lies strictly below the quasi-star/quasi-clique envelope on a positive-measure set of β; without this comparison the claim that the natural endpoint profile is not universal remains incomplete.
Authors: We will add a new subsection (Subsection 4.3) containing the requested direct comparison. Let f(β) denote the S_{2,1} density realized by the one-parameter three-class complement-split family and let g(β) be the lower envelope of the quasi-star and quasi-clique constructions. We derive the explicit cubic polynomials f(β) = β(1-β)(1-2β) + (1/3)β^2(1-β) and g(β) = min{β(1-β)^2, (1-β)β^2} and prove that f(β) < g(β) for all β ∈ (0,1/2) igcup {1/3}. The difference f(β)-g(β) is strictly negative on a set of positive Lebesgue measure (in fact, on an open interval around β=1/4). The algebraic verification consists of factoring the difference polynomial and checking sign changes at the critical points; this establishes that the new family is strictly superior on a positive-measure set and therefore that the endpoint profile is not universal. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: derivation uses independent transfer reduction plus external citation
full rationale
The paper's central results rest on an explicit transfer argument with degree-square tie-breaking that reduces the problem to optimizations over almost-regular, threshold, and finite-staircase graphs, together with a cited theorem from Balogh et al. (distinct authors) for the high-density regime. No equation or claim is shown to be equivalent to its inputs by construction, no parameters are fitted and then relabeled as predictions, and no load-bearing step reduces to a self-citation chain. The constructions (quasi-star, quasi-clique, complement-split family) are presented as explicit families whose densities are computed directly, not defined circularly. This is a standard self-contained proof structure in extremal graph theory.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard definitions of graphs, vertices, edges, non-edges, and injective homomorphisms.
Reference graph
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