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arxiv: 2604.19408 · v3 · pith:IAAPXCOXnew · submitted 2026-04-21 · 🧮 math.AC · math.CO

Edge Ideals of Prime Ideal Graphs over Finite Rings: Ordinary Powers, Fiber Cones, and Linear Powers

Pith reviewed 2026-05-14 21:37 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AC math.CO
keywords prime ideal graphedge idealordinary powerspolymatroidal idealanalytic spreadcomplete split graphlinear resolution
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The pith

Prime ideal graphs of finite rings are complete split graphs whose edge ideal powers have explicit generators and are polymatroidal.

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

For a finite commutative ring R with identity and proper prime ideal P, the prime ideal graph Γ_P(R) has vertices R minus zero, with edges when the product lies in P. The paper proves this graph is isomorphic to the join of a complete graph on |P| minus one vertices and an independent set on the remaining vertices. This identification yields the minimal vertex covers, an irredundant primary decomposition of the edge ideal I(Γ_P(R)), and a precise list of the monomial generators of each ordinary power I^n. The same list shows that every power is polymatroidal, so each has linear quotients and a 2n-linear resolution. The count of those generators is interpreted as the Hilbert function of the special fiber ring, giving the analytic spread of I.

Core claim

The prime ideal graph Γ_P(R) is isomorphic to K_{|P|-1} ∨ K-bar_{|R|-|P|}, and a monomial x^α y^β belongs to the minimal generators of I(Γ_P(R))^n if and only if |α| + |β| = 2n, |β| ≤ n, and 0 ≤ α_i ≤ n for all i. This characterization implies that every ordinary power is polymatroidal, hence possesses linear quotients and a 2n-linear resolution, while μ(I(Γ_P(R))^n) equals the Hilbert function of the special fiber ring and determines the analytic spread.

What carries the argument

The explicit isomorphism Γ_P(R) ≅ K_{|P|-1} ∨ K-bar_{|R|-|P|}, which realizes the graph as a complete split graph and supplies the combinatorial data needed to list generators of the edge ideal powers.

If this is right

  • The edge ideal I(Γ_P(R)) admits an irredundant primary decomposition obtained from the minimal vertex covers of the graph.
  • Every ordinary power I^n is polymatroidal and therefore possesses linear quotients together with a 2n-linear resolution.
  • A closed formula for the minimal number of generators μ(I^n) follows directly from the exponent conditions on α and β.
  • The analytic spread of I equals the degree of the Hilbert polynomial of the special fiber ring, which is recovered from the growth of μ(I^n).

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The construction supplies an explicit infinite family of polymatroidal monomial ideals whose generators are governed by simple degree and bound conditions.
  • Analogous graph-to-ideal translations may produce further families of ideals with linear resolutions in other ring-induced graphs.
  • The same exponent conditions can be used to read off additional numerical invariants such as the Castelnuovo-Mumford regularity without computing a resolution.

Load-bearing premise

R is finite so that the vertex sets have known cardinalities and the isomorphism together with the generator counting formulas can be written down explicitly.

What would settle it

Exhibit a finite ring R with proper prime P such that some monomial satisfying |α| + |β| = 2n, |β| ≤ n and 0 ≤ α_i ≤ n fails to lie in the minimal generating set of I(Γ_P(R))^n.

read the original abstract

Let $R$ be a finite commutative ring with identity and let $P$ be a proper prime ideal of $R$. The prime ideal graph $\Gamma_P(R)$ has vertex set $R\setminus\{0\}$, where two distinct vertices $x$ and $y$ are adjacent if and only if $xy\in P$. We prove that prime ideal graphs form a ring-realizable subfamily of complete split graphs. More precisely, if $m=|P|$, $q=|R/P|$, then $q$ is a prime power and $\Gamma_P(R)\cong K_{m-1}\vee \overline{K}_{m(q-1)}$. We also prove a realization theorem showing that every complete split graph of this form arises from a prime ideal of a finite commutative ring. For the edge ideal $I=I(\Gamma_P(R))$, we determine the minimal vertex covers and obtain the irredundant primary decomposition. We characterize the minimal monomial generators of every ordinary power $I^n$ and derive a closed formula for $\mu(I^n)$. We further interpret this formula as the Hilbert function of the special fiber ring $\mathcal{F}(I)$, compute the analytic spread, and prove that $\mathcal{F}(I)$ is a normal Cohen--Macaulay affine semigroup ring. Finally, we show that $I$ is matroidal and that every ordinary power $I^n$ is polymatroidal; consequently, $I^n$ has linear quotients and a $2n$-linear minimal free resolution for all $n\geq 1$.

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 paper studies edge ideals of prime ideal graphs Γ_P(R) for a finite commutative ring R with identity and proper prime ideal P. It proves that Γ_P(R) ≅ K_{|P|-1} ∨ K-bar_{|R|-|P|}, derives minimal vertex covers and an irredundant primary decomposition of the edge ideal I(Γ_P(R)), characterizes the minimal monomial generators of the ordinary powers I(Γ_P(R))^n via the conditions |α| + |β| = 2n, |β| ≤ n and 0 ≤ α_i ≤ n, proves that all such powers are polymatroidal (hence have linear quotients and 2n-linear resolutions), gives a closed formula for μ(I(Γ_P(R))^n), and computes the analytic spread of I(Γ_P(R)) by viewing μ as the Hilbert function of the special fiber ring.

Significance. The explicit isomorphism to a complete split graph transfers combinatorial results on split graphs to this ring-induced family, yielding a complete description of the powers of the edge ideal together with strong homological consequences (polymatroidality, linear resolutions). The closed formula for μ and the analytic-spread computation add concrete algebraic invariants. These results strengthen the literature on edge ideals of graphs arising from algebraic structures.

minor comments (2)
  1. [Theorem 4.3] In the statement of the generator characterization (around the displayed conditions on α, β), an explicit small example (e.g., R = ℤ/4ℤ, P = (2)) would help readers verify the degree and exponent bounds.
  2. [Section 2] The notation for the join ∨ and the empty graph K-bar is introduced without a one-sentence reminder; a brief parenthetical definition would improve accessibility for readers outside graph theory.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful reading of the manuscript and for the positive recommendation to accept. The referee's summary accurately reflects the main results on the structure of prime ideal graphs, the characterization of powers of their edge ideals, polymatroidality, and the computation of analytic spread.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

The paper's derivation chain starts from the definition of the prime ideal graph Γ_P(R) (vertices R∖{0}, edges when xy∈P) and uses only the primeness of P (so R/P is a field, adjacency holds precisely on the partition P∖{0} vs. R∖P) together with finiteness to obtain the explicit isomorphism Γ_P(R)≅K_{|P|-1}∨K-bar_{|R|-|P|}. The minimal-generator characterization for I(Γ_P(R))^n is then a direct combinatorial statement on this fixed split graph (clique on |P|-1 variables, independent set on the rest, all cross-edges present), with the degree conditions |α|+|β|=2n, |β|≤n, α_i≤n arising from ordinary edge-counting in the n-th power; no fitted parameters, self-definitions, or load-bearing self-citations appear. All steps are first-principles consequences of the ring axioms and standard monomial-ideal combinatorics, hence self-contained.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper rests on standard domain assumptions from commutative algebra; no free parameters, no invented entities, and no ad-hoc axioms beyond the definition of the graph.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption R is a finite commutative ring with identity
    Stated at the outset to define the vertex set and adjacency.
  • domain assumption P is a proper prime ideal of R
    Required for the adjacency rule and to obtain the split-graph isomorphism.

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