An improved constant in Banaszczyk's transference theorem
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 18:11 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The product of a lattice covering radius and dual shortest vector is bounded above by 0.1275n plus lower-order terms.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The paper proves that for every n-dimensional lattice L the inequality mu(L) lambda_1(L*) is strictly less than (0.1275 + o(1)) times n holds, obtained by inserting a packing-derived upper bound on discrete Gaussian mass into the corresponding place in the original proof of the transference theorem.
What carries the argument
The packing-based upper bound on the mass of the discrete Gaussian distribution, inserted in place of the Fourier-analytic estimate used in the original proof.
Load-bearing premise
The packing bound on discrete Gaussian mass applies directly in the relevant step of the original proof without any further adjustments or loss of the stated constant.
What would settle it
An explicit family of lattices in growing dimension n for which the product mu(L) lambda_1(L*) is at least 0.1275 n plus a term that does not tend to zero would falsify the claimed bound.
read the original abstract
$ \newcommand{\R}{\ensuremath{\mathbb{R}}} \newcommand{\lat}{\mathcal{L}} \newcommand{\ensuremath}[1]{#1} $We show that \[ \mu(\lat) \lambda_1(\lat^*) < \big( 0.1275 + o(1) \big) \cdot n \; , \] where $\mu(\lat)$ is the covering radius of an $n$-dimensional lattice $\lat \subset \R^n$ and $\lambda_1(\lat^*)$ is the length of the shortest non-zero vector in the dual lattice $\lat^*$. This improves on Banaszczyk's celebrated transference theorem (Math. Annal., 1993) by about 20%. Our proof follows Banaszczyk exactly, except in one step, where we replace a Fourier-analytic bound on the discrete Gaussian mass with a slightly stronger bound based on packing. The packing-based bound that we use was already proven by Aggarwal, Dadush, Regev, and Stephens-Davidowitz (STOC, 2015) in a very different context. Our contribution is therefore simply the observation that this implies a better transference theorem.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims an improved transference bound μ(ℒ) λ₁(ℒ*) < (0.1275 + o(1)) n for n-dimensional lattices, improving Banaszczyk's 1993 constant by roughly 20%. The argument follows Banaszczyk's proof exactly except at one step, where the Fourier-analytic estimate on discrete Gaussian mass is replaced by the packing-based bound already established in Aggarwal–Dadush–Regev–Stephens-Davidowitz (STOC 2015). The contribution is presented as the observation that this substitution yields the stated numerical improvement.
Significance. If the direct substitution is valid, the note supplies a modest quantitative sharpening of a classical result in the geometry of numbers. The improvement is parameter-free and rests on an independently proved bound, which is a strength. The result may be of interest to researchers working on lattice algorithms or transference theorems, though the absolute gain (from Banaszczyk's original constant to 0.1275) remains incremental.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract and introduction could briefly recall the numerical value of Banaszczyk's original constant (or the precise ratio of improvement) to make the 20% claim immediately verifiable without external lookup.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive summary, significance assessment, and recommendation to accept the manuscript. No major comments were raised.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper's derivation follows Banaszczyk (1993) exactly except for substituting a discrete Gaussian mass bound proven independently in the 2015 STOC paper by Aggarwal et al. (with author overlap). This prior result was established for algorithmic purposes in a separate publication and is externally verifiable; the current contribution is merely the observation that the substitution yields the improved constant. No step reduces by construction to the paper's own inputs, fitted parameters, or unverified self-citation chains. The cited bound is load-bearing but constitutes real external evidence under the evaluation rules.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard properties of Euclidean lattices, dual lattices, covering radius, and shortest vectors
discussion (0)
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