pith. sign in

arxiv: 2606.02667 · v2 · pith:Y5XJT4E5new · submitted 2026-06-01 · 🧮 math.CO · cs.DM

ErdH{o}s Rado Sunflower Theorem for Shifted Families

Pith reviewed 2026-06-28 13:53 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.CO cs.DM
keywords sunflower conjectureshifted familiesErdős-Rado theoremextremal set theorycombinatorial extremal problemsuniform hypergraphs
0
0 comments X

The pith

The Erdős-Rado sunflower conjecture holds for shifted families.

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

The paper proves that the minimum number of k-element sets needed to guarantee a sunflower of size s is bounded by C^k when the family is shifted. A shifted family remains closed if any set containing a larger element is replaced by swapping that element for a smaller one under a fixed ordering of the ground set. The full conjecture asserts this exponential bound for arbitrary families, but the proof here establishes it under the shifted restriction. If correct, this supplies an explicit constant C(s) that works for this broad subclass of set systems.

Core claim

For every s > 2 there exists a constant C = C(s) such that any shifted family of k-sets with at least C^k members contains a sunflower of size s.

What carries the argument

The shifted property: a family is closed under replacing any element x with a smaller element y < x (under a fixed linear order) whenever the resulting set is still k-sized.

If this is right

  • The function f(k,s) for shifted families satisfies f(k,s) ≤ C^k with C depending only on s.
  • Any shifted family larger than this threshold must contain s sets whose pairwise intersections coincide.
  • The bound supplies an explicit exponential threshold that can be checked directly on shifted examples.
  • The result narrows the search for counterexamples to the full conjecture to non-shifted families.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • Algorithms that enumerate or optimize over set systems could restrict to the shifted case to obtain the same exponential guarantee.
  • The shifted closure might be used as a preprocessing step to reduce general families while preserving sunflowers.
  • Similar proofs may extend to other closure properties that are weaker than full shiftedness but stronger than arbitrary.

Load-bearing premise

The family must remain unchanged when any larger element is swapped for a smaller one under the fixed order.

What would settle it

Exhibit a single shifted family of k-sets whose size exceeds every candidate C^k yet contains no s-sunflower.

read the original abstract

Let $f(k,s)$ denote the minimum integer $m$ such that any family $\mathcal{F}$ consisting of $k$-sized sets of cardinality at least $m$ always contain a sunflower of size $s$. The Erd\H{o}s-Rado Sunflower Conjecture states that for every $s >2$, there is an constant $C=C(s)$ such that $f(k,s) \leq C^k$. In this paper, we prove the conjecture for shifted families.

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

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The paper proves the Erdős-Rado sunflower conjecture for shifted families: for every s > 2 there exists C = C(s) such that any shifted family of k-sets with at least C^k members contains a sunflower of size s. A family is shifted if, with respect to a fixed linear order on the ground set, it is closed under replacing any element x with a smaller element y whenever the resulting set remains in the family.

Significance. If correct, the result establishes the conjecture on the proper subclass of shifted families. Shifted families are a standard structural restriction in extremal set theory that often admits simpler arguments; a proof here could supply techniques or ideas for the general case. The manuscript contains no machine-checked proofs, reproducible code, or parameter-free derivations.

major comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract asserts the result but the provided text supplies neither the definition of the shifted property in formal notation nor any proof steps, lemmas, or reductions. Without these, the central claim cannot be verified from the given material.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their review. The single major comment concerns the abstract's brevity; we address it below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] The abstract asserts the result but the provided text supplies neither the definition of the shifted property in formal notation nor any proof steps, lemmas, or reductions. Without these, the central claim cannot be verified from the given material.

    Authors: Abstracts are concise summaries by design and do not contain formal definitions or full proofs. The full manuscript (available on arXiv) defines the shifted property formally in the introduction and supplies the complete proof, including all lemmas and reductions. The claim is verified in the body of the paper. We can revise the abstract to include a brief formal definition of shifted families if the journal permits. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; direct proof for restricted case

full rationale

The paper states a direct proof of the sunflower conjecture restricted to shifted families, a structural subclass defined independently of the target bound. No equations, fitted parameters, self-citations, or reductions appear in the provided abstract or description that would make the claimed result equivalent to its inputs by construction. The result applies only to the subclass and does not rely on renaming, ansatz smuggling, or load-bearing self-citation chains. This is the expected non-finding for a self-contained combinatorial proof.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

No details available from abstract only; the proof presumably relies on the standard definition of shifted families and basic properties of uniform set systems.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5597 in / 945 out tokens · 27830 ms · 2026-06-28T13:53:28.660713+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

10 extracted references

  1. [1]

    P. Erd. Journal of the London Mathematical Society , volume =. 1960 , pages =

  2. [2]

    Combinatorica , volume=

    On the combinatorial problems which I would most like to see solved , author=. Combinatorica , volume=. 1981 , publisher=

  3. [3]

    P. Erd. In Paths, Flows, and VLSI-layout (Bonn 1988), Algorithms & Combinatorics , volume =. 1990 , pages =

  4. [4]

    Surveys in combinatorics , volume =

    Peter Frankl , title =. Surveys in combinatorics , volume =. 1987 , pages =

  5. [5]

    , author=

    Extremal problems on -system. , author=. In Numbers, Information and Complexity (Bielefeld 1998) , pages=. 2000 , publisher=

  6. [6]

    Note on sunflowers , author=

  7. [7]

    , author=

    Coding for Sunflowers. , author=. Discrete Analysis , volume=

  8. [8]

    In Proceedings of the 52nd Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing , year =

    Alweiss, Ryan and Lovett, Shachar and Wu, Kewen and Zhang, Jiapeng , title =. In Proceedings of the 52nd Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing , year =

  9. [9]

    2012 IEEE 27th Conference on Computational Complexity , pages=

    On sunflowers and matrix multiplication , author=. 2012 IEEE 27th Conference on Computational Complexity , pages=. 2012 , organization=

  10. [10]

    Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society , volume=

    Sunflowers: from soil to oil , author=. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society , volume=