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arxiv: 2605.15738 · v1 · pith:FYFXAPHVnew · submitted 2026-05-15 · 🧮 math.CO

A proof of Haemers' toughness conjecture

Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 17:33 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.CO MSC 05C5005C40
keywords toughnessLaplacian eigenvaluesalgebraic connectivitygraph connectivityspectral graph theoryHaemers conjecturevertex cutsminimum degree
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0 comments X

The pith

For any connected graph, toughness is at least the second-smallest Laplacian eigenvalue divided by the gap between the largest eigenvalue and the minimum degree.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper proves a lower bound on graph toughness expressed directly in terms of the Laplacian spectrum. Toughness quantifies the smallest ratio of vertices removed to the number of resulting components, capturing resistance to fragmentation. The bound links this combinatorial quantity to the algebraic connectivity and the spread of Laplacian eigenvalues, offering a computable estimate that avoids enumerating all possible cuts. A sympathetic reader cares because the result settles a long-standing conjecture and supplies a spectral certificate for a classical graph parameter.

Core claim

If Γ is a connected graph with minimum degree δ and Laplacian eigenvalues 0=μ₁<μ₂≤⋯≤μₙ, then the toughness of Γ is bounded below by μ₂/(μₙ−δ).

What carries the argument

The ratio μ₂/(μₙ−δ), where μ₂ is the algebraic connectivity and μₙ the largest Laplacian eigenvalue, which is shown to lower-bound the minimum of |S|/c(Γ−S) over all vertex cuts S.

Load-bearing premise

The graph must be connected so that the Laplacian has a simple zero eigenvalue and the algebraic connectivity μ₂ is strictly positive.

What would settle it

A single connected graph whose toughness, computed by checking all vertex cuts, falls strictly below the value of its μ₂ divided by (μₙ minus δ).

read the original abstract

We prove that if $\Gamma$ is a connected graph with minimum degree $\delta$ and Laplacian eigenvalues $0=\mu_1<\mu_2\leqslant \cdots \leqslant \mu_n$, then the toughness of $\Gamma$ is bounded below by $\mu_2/(\mu_n-\delta)$.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript proves Haemers' toughness conjecture: if Γ is a connected graph with minimum degree δ and Laplacian eigenvalues 0=μ₁<μ₂≤⋯≤μₙ, then the toughness t(Γ) is at least μ₂/(μₙ−δ). The argument proceeds from the Rayleigh-quotient characterization of algebraic connectivity μ₂ together with a test vector assembled from the components of a minimum-toughness vertex cut, using only the definition of the Laplacian quadratic form and the bound μₙ on the maximum quadratic contribution from cut edges.

Significance. If correct, the result supplies an explicit, parameter-free spectral lower bound on toughness that resolves a known conjecture in spectral graph theory. The derivation is self-contained, invokes the connectedness hypothesis only to guarantee μ₂>0, and avoids hidden normalizations or post-hoc adjustments. This constitutes a clean contribution to the literature relating Laplacian spectra to connectivity parameters.

minor comments (2)
  1. In the statement of the main theorem (presumably §1 or the abstract), the inequality is written with ≤ for the ordered eigenvalues; confirm that the proof treats the case of repeated eigenvalues correctly when constructing the test vector.
  2. The manuscript would benefit from an explicit sentence recalling the definition of toughness t(Γ) = min |S|/c(Γ−S) immediately before the proof, to make the cut-vector construction self-contained for readers.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive evaluation of our manuscript and the recommendation to accept. The referee's summary correctly identifies the core elements of the proof, including the use of the Rayleigh quotient for algebraic connectivity and the construction of the test vector from a minimum-toughness cut.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; direct derivation from definitions

full rationale

The manuscript derives the toughness lower bound directly from the Rayleigh quotient applied to the algebraic connectivity eigenvector, combined with a test vector constructed from the components of a minimum-toughness cut. All steps invoke only the definition of the Laplacian quadratic form, the minimax characterization of μ₂, and the fact that μₙ bounds the quadratic-form contribution from cut-incident edges. Connectedness is used solely to guarantee μ₂ > 0 and is not extended. No parameter is fitted and then relabeled as a prediction, no self-citation supplies a load-bearing uniqueness theorem, and no ansatz is smuggled in. The central inequality therefore reduces to standard spectral-graph-theory identities rather than to any quantity defined in terms of the target bound itself.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The proof rests on the standard axiomatic framework of spectral graph theory (Laplacian matrix properties, connectedness implying μ₁=0 with multiplicity 1) and the classical definition of toughness; no new free parameters, invented entities, or ad-hoc assumptions are introduced.

axioms (2)
  • standard math The Laplacian matrix L = D − A of a simple undirected graph has smallest eigenvalue 0 with eigenvector the all-ones vector precisely when the graph is connected.
    Invoked to guarantee μ₁ = 0 and μ₂ > 0.
  • domain assumption Toughness t(Γ) is defined as the minimum of |S| / c(Γ − S) over all vertex cuts S that increase the number of components.
    Central definition used to state the conjecture and the proved bound.

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

12 extracted references · 12 canonical work pages

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