pith. sign in

arxiv: 2606.28610 · v1 · pith:BGV4ERIVnew · submitted 2026-06-26 · 🧮 math.CO · math.AC

Chordality, syzygies, and shellability for hypergraphic analogues of interval graphs

Pith reviewed 2026-06-30 00:38 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.CO math.AC
keywords cointerval hypergraphsunderclosed complexeschordal hypergraphsAlexander duallinear quotientsvertex decomposableshellabilitycircuit ideals
0
0 comments X

The pith

Cointerval hypergraphs equal underclosed complexes up to complement, and underclosed clutters are Woodroofe-chordal.

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

The paper proves that cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes are equivalent via complementation. It shows that underclosed clutters satisfy Woodroofe's chordality condition. This yields that the associated Alexander dual complexes are vertex decomposable, so the circuit ideals have linear quotients. The dual complexes also admit shellings ordered by their underclosed vertex sets.

Core claim

Underclosed clutters are chordal in the sense of Woodroofe. Their Alexander dual complexes are therefore vertex decomposable and shellable via underclosed vertex orders, which implies that the corresponding circuit ideals have linear quotients.

What carries the argument

The equivalence of cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes up to complementation, together with Woodroofe's chordality applied directly to underclosed clutters.

If this is right

  • The circuit ideals of these hypergraphs have linear quotients.
  • The Alexander dual complexes are vertex decomposable.
  • The dual complexes admit shellings induced by underclosed vertex orders.
  • This resolves the question of Dochtermann and Engström on linear quotients.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

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

  • The equivalence may allow results on one class to transfer immediately to the other via complement.
  • Higher-degree versions of Fröberg's theorem could be tested first on underclosed clutters.
  • Vertex decomposability might serve as a uniform test for chordality across other hypergraph analogues.

Load-bearing premise

The prior definitions of cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes are compatible for equivalence up to complementation, and Woodroofe's chordality applies directly to underclosed clutters without extra restrictions.

What would settle it

An explicit underclosed clutter whose Alexander dual fails to be vertex decomposable, or a cointerval hypergraph whose complement fails to be underclosed.

read the original abstract

Interval graphs are a special class of chordal graphs, and hence have connections to commutative algebra via Fr\"oberg's theorem that characterizes linear resolutions of squarefree quadratic ideals. In recent years, several hypergraphic analogues of interval and chordal graphs have been proposed, in part as an effort to extend Fr\"oberg's theorem to ideals generated in higher degree. In this paper, we study two such classes from the literature, cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes, and show that they are in fact equivalent up to complementation. We then consider their place in the broader theory of higher-dimensional chordality, proving that an underclosed clutter is chordal in the sense of Woodroofe. As a consequence, we answer a question of Dochtermann and Engstr\"om by showing that the associated Alexander dual complexes are vertex decomposable, implying that the corresponding circuit ideals have linear quotients. We furthermore show that these dual complexes have shellings induced by their underclosed vertex orders.

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 shows that cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes are equivalent up to complementation via explicit bijections in Section 2. It proves that every circuit in an underclosed clutter satisfies Woodroofe's chordality condition (Theorem 3.4). As a consequence, the Alexander dual complexes are vertex decomposable (answering a question of Dochtermann and Engström), the corresponding circuit ideals have linear quotients, and the duals admit shellings induced by the underclosed vertex orders.

Significance. If the results hold, the work supplies a concrete, combinatorially explicit class of hypergraphs where higher-dimensional chordality holds without extra restrictions, directly linking two proposed hypergraphic analogues of interval graphs. The explicit bijections, direct chordality verification, and induced shellings are strengths that provide verifiable tools for studying syzygies and resolutions in the associated circuit ideals.

minor comments (2)
  1. [Section 2] Section 2: the bijection statements would be easier to follow with a small concrete example of a cointerval hypergraph and its underclosed complement.
  2. [Theorem 3.4] Theorem 3.4: the statement that the verification is 'direct' could note explicitly which clauses of Woodroofe's definition are checked for each circuit type.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive summary of the manuscript, for highlighting its significance in linking cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes, and for the recommendation to accept.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity identified

full rationale

The derivation proceeds via explicit bijections establishing equivalence of cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes (Section 2), followed by direct verification that every circuit in an underclosed clutter satisfies Woodroofe's chordality condition (Theorem 3.4). Vertex decomposability of the Alexander dual then follows from the external chordal-implies-vertex-decomposable implication for clutters, with shellings constructed explicitly from the underclosed vertex orders. All load-bearing steps are internal to the stated definitions or rely on independently established external results; no self-definitional reductions, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citation chains appear.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

Relies on standard background theorems and prior definitions of the hypergraph classes; no new free parameters, ad-hoc axioms, or invented entities are introduced.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Fröberg's theorem characterizes linear resolutions of squarefree quadratic ideals
    Invoked as the motivating connection between chordal graphs and algebra.
  • domain assumption Definitions of cointerval hypergraphs and underclosed complexes from the literature
    The paper studies these two classes and proves their equivalence.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5709 in / 1087 out tokens · 45823 ms · 2026-06-30T00:38:53.047865+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

25 extracted references

  1. [1]

    Adiprasito, Eran Nevo, and Jose A

    Karim A. Adiprasito, Eran Nevo, and Jose A. Samper,Higher chordality: from graphs to complexes, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc.144(2016), no. 8, 3317–3329. MR 3503700 2

  2. [2]

    Bruno Benedetti, Lisa Seccia, and Matteo Varbaro,Hamiltonian paths, unit-interval complexes, and deter- minantal facet ideals, Adv. in Appl. Math.141(2022), Paper No. 102407, 55. MR 4456796 2, 3, 7, 10, 13, 18

  3. [3]

    Mina Bigdeli, Ali Akbar Yazdan Pour, and Rashid Zaare-Nahandi,Stability of Betti numbers under reduction processes: towards chordality of clutters, J. Combin. Theory Ser. A145(2017), 129–149. MR 3551648 2

  4. [4]

    Appl., vol

    Anders Bj ¨orner,The homology and shellability of matroids and geometric lattices, Matroid applications, Encyclopedia Math. Appl., vol. 40, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1992, pp. 226–283. MR 1165544 13

  5. [5]

    Wachs,Shellable nonpure complexes and posets

    Anders Bj¨orner and Michelle L. Wachs,Shellable nonpure complexes and posets. I, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 348(1996), no. 4, 1299–1327. MR 1333388 17

  6. [6]

    Booth and George S

    Kellogg S. Booth and George S. Lueker,Testing for the consecutive ones property, interval graphs, and graph planarity usingPQ-tree algorithms, J. Comput. System Sci.13(1976), no. 3, 335–379. MR 433962 18

  7. [7]

    Math.256(2023), no

    Maria Chudnovsky and Gil Kalai,Attempting perfect hypergraphs, Israel J. Math.256(2023), no. 1, 133–151. MR 4652936 19

  8. [8]

    Connon and S

    E. Connon and S. Faridi,Chorded complexes and a necessary condition for a monomial ideal to have a linear resolution, J. Combin. Theory Ser. A120(2013), no. 7, 1714–1731. MR 3092695 2 19

  9. [9]

    1-3, 89–102

    Guoli Ding,On interval clutters, Discrete Math.254(2002), no. 1-3, 89–102. MR 1909862 7

  10. [10]

    Anton Dochtermann,Exposed circuits, linear quotients, and chordal clutters, J. Combin. Theory Ser. A177 (2021), Paper No. 105327, 22. MR 4147626 2

  11. [11]

    Z.270(2012), no

    Anton Dochtermann and Alexander Engstr¨om,Cellular resolutions of cointerval ideals, Math. Z.270(2012), no. 1-2, 145–163. MR 2875826 2, 3, 6, 7, 13

  12. [12]

    Eagon and Victor Reiner,Resolutions of Stanley–Reisner rings and Alexander duality, J

    John A. Eagon and Victor Reiner,Resolutions of Stanley–Reisner rings and Alexander duality, J. Pure Appl. Algebra130(1998), no. 3, 265–275. MR 1633767 5

  13. [13]

    Scand.106(2010), no

    Eric Emtander,A class of hypergraphs that generalizes chordal graphs, Math. Scand.106(2010), no. 1, 50–66. MR 2603461 2, 3

  14. [14]

    Peter Frankl,The shifting technique in extremal set theory, Surveys in combinatorics 1987 (New Cross, 1987), London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser., vol. 123, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1987, pp. 81–110. MR 905277 7

  15. [15]

    26, Part 2, PWN, Warsaw, 1990, pp

    Ralf Fr¨oberg,On Stanley–Reisner rings, Topics in algebra, Part 2 (Warsaw, 1988), Banach Center Publ., vol. 26, Part 2, PWN, Warsaw, 1990, pp. 57–70. MR 1171260 5

  16. [16]

    P . C. Gilmore and A. J. Hoffman,A characterization of comparability graphs and of interval graphs, Canadian J. Math.16(1964), 539–548. MR 175811 18

  17. [17]

    Bennet Goeckner and Marta Pavelka,Vertex orders in higher dimensions, 2024. 3, 13

  18. [18]

    MR 562306 19

    Martin Charles Golumbic,Algorithmic graph theory and perfect graphs, Computer Science and Applied Mathematics, Academic Press [Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers], New York-London-Toronto, 1980, With a foreword by Claude Berge. MR 562306 19

  19. [19]

    Steven Klee and Jos´e Alejandro Samper,Lexicographic shellability, matroids, and pure order ideals, Adv. in Appl. Math.67(2015), 1–19. MR 3339029 13

  20. [20]

    227, Springer-Verlag, New York, 2005

    Ezra Miller and Bernd Sturmfels,Combinatorial commutative algebra, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 227, Springer-Verlag, New York, 2005. MR 2110098 5

  21. [21]

    Scott Provan and Louis J

    J. Scott Provan and Louis J. Billera,Decompositions of simplicial complexes related to diameters of convex polyhedra, Math. Oper. Res.5(1980), no. 4, 576–594. MR 593648 5

  22. [22]

    54(1985), no

    Jan Reiterman, Vojtˇech R¨odl, Edita Siˇnajov´a, and Miroslav T˚uma,Threshold hypergraphs, Discrete Math. 54(1985), no. 2, 193–200. MR 791660 19

  23. [23]

    Lisa Seccia,Binomial edge ideals of weakly closed graphs, Int. Math. Res. Not. IMRN (2023), no. 24, 22045– 22068. MR 4681308 18

  24. [24]

    Wood,Characterisations of intersection graphs by vertex orderings, Australas

    David R. Wood,Characterisations of intersection graphs by vertex orderings, Australas. J. Combin.34(2006), 261–268. MR 2196766 7

  25. [25]

    Russ Woodroofe,Chordal and sequentially Cohen–Macaulay clutters, Electron. J. Combin.18(2011), no. 1, Paper 208, 20. MR 2853065 2, 3, 4, 5, 9, 10, 13 DEPARTMENT OFMATHEMATICS, TEXASSTATEUNIVERSITY, SANMARCOS, TX 78666, USA Email address:dochtermann@txstate.edu DEPARTMENT OFMATHEMATICS, UNIVERSITY OFSANDIEGO, SANDIEGO, CA 92110, USA Email address:bgoeckner...