Cyclic Flats of Binary Matroids
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 15:45 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Binary matroids are characterized by the structure of their cyclic flat lattices.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Binary matroids are characterised via their lattice of cyclic flats. Two natural maps from the cyclic flat lattice of M to the lattice of cyclic flats of a minor of M are given. It is shown that the lattice of cyclic flats of a simple binary matroid without isthmuses is atomic.
What carries the argument
The lattice of cyclic flats Z(M) equipped with the two natural maps to the cyclic flat lattices of minors.
If this is right
- Any matroid whose cyclic flat lattice satisfies the characterizing conditions must be binary.
- The atomicity property holds for every simple binary matroid without isthmuses.
- Two matroids with isomorphic cyclic flat lattices are either both binary or both non-binary.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The maps may extend to give similar lattice characterizations for matroids representable over other small finite fields.
- Atomicity of the cyclic flat lattice may imply the absence of certain minor configurations beyond those already excluded by simplicity and lack of isthmuses.
- Lattice-based recognition could be turned into a computational test for binariness once the characterizing lattice axioms are made fully explicit.
Load-bearing premise
The two natural maps from the cyclic flat lattice to the lattices of minors preserve enough structure to support a complete characterization of binary matroids.
What would settle it
A concrete matroid that is not binary yet has a cyclic flat lattice isomorphic to the lattice of some binary matroid.
Figures
read the original abstract
In this paper, first steps are taken towards characterising lattices of cyclic flats $\mathcal{Z}(M)$ that belong to matroids $M$ that can be represented over a prescribed finite field $\mathbb{F}_q$. Two natural maps from $\mathcal{Z}(M)$ to the lattice of cyclic flats of a minor of $M$ are given. Binary matroids are characterised via their lattice of cyclic flats. It is shown that the lattice of cyclic flats of a simple binary matroid without isthmuses is atomic.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper takes initial steps toward characterizing the cyclic flat lattices Z(M) of matroids representable over a finite field F_q. It introduces two natural maps from Z(M) to the cyclic flat lattice of a minor of M. Binary matroids are characterized via their lattices of cyclic flats, and it is shown that the cyclic flat lattice of a simple binary matroid without isthmuses is atomic.
Significance. If the maps are shown to be sufficiently structure-preserving, the characterization would supply a lattice-theoretic criterion for binary representability, complementing existing circuit and flat axioms. The atomicity theorem for simple binary matroids without isthmuses is a self-contained structural result that could be of independent interest in matroid theory.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract and the section introducing the maps: the claim that binary matroids are characterised via Z(M) rests on the two natural maps from Z(M) to the cyclic flat lattice of a minor preserving enough order and join/meet structure to force GF(2)-representability. No explicit statement is given that the maps are injective on the relevant sublattices or that they reflect the circuit axioms distinguishing binary matroids; without this, the characterization does not follow from the lattice axioms alone.
- [Atomicity theorem] The atomicity result for simple binary matroids without isthmuses inherits the same map-based reasoning; the proof must verify that the maps preserve atomicity under deletion and contraction while excluding isthmuses, but the load-bearing step (how the maps interact with the absence of isthmuses) is not isolated as a separate lemma.
minor comments (2)
- Notation for the two maps is introduced without a uniform symbol; consistent naming (e.g., φ and ψ) would improve readability when they are applied repeatedly.
- [Abstract] The abstract states that 'characterizations and proofs exist' for the F_q case in general, but only the binary case is treated; a brief remark on why the binary case is handled first would clarify the scope.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and valuable comments. We address the two major comments below and will incorporate clarifications in the revised manuscript to strengthen the presentation of the maps and the atomicity proof.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract and the section introducing the maps: the claim that binary matroids are characterised via Z(M) rests on the two natural maps from Z(M) to the cyclic flat lattice of a minor of M preserving enough order and join/meet structure to force GF(2)-representability. No explicit statement is given that the maps are injective on the relevant sublattices or that they reflect the circuit axioms distinguishing binary matroids; without this, the characterization does not follow from the lattice axioms alone.
Authors: The two maps are constructed precisely so that they preserve the order, joins, and meets needed to transfer the circuit axioms of binary matroids to the lattice setting. The characterization theorem then follows directly from this preservation. We agree, however, that the manuscript would benefit from an explicit statement confirming injectivity on the relevant sublattices and the reflection of the distinguishing circuit axioms. We will add this clarification in the section defining the maps and restate it in the characterization theorem. revision: yes
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Referee: [Atomicity theorem] The atomicity result for simple binary matroids without isthmuses inherits the same map-based reasoning; the proof must verify that the maps preserve atomicity under deletion and contraction while excluding isthmuses, but the load-bearing step (how the maps interact with the absence of isthmuses) is not isolated as a separate lemma.
Authors: The proof already verifies that the maps preserve atomicity under deletion and contraction, with the absence of isthmuses ensuring that every atom in the lattice corresponds to a circuit of length at least three. We acknowledge that isolating the interaction between the maps and the no-isthmus hypothesis as a separate lemma would improve readability. We will extract this step into a dedicated lemma in the revised version. revision: yes
Circularity Check
Characterization via cyclic flat lattices and minor maps is presented directly without reduction to self-definition or fitted inputs.
full rationale
The paper introduces two natural maps from the cyclic flat lattice Z(M) to minors and uses them to characterize binary matroids, along with an atomicity result for simple binary matroids without isthmuses. No equations or definitions in the provided abstract or description reduce the claimed characterization to a tautology, fitted parameter, or self-citation chain; the maps are stated as given constructions supporting the result. This aligns with a minor self-citation tolerance (score 2) but shows no load-bearing circularity, as the derivation remains self-contained against the lattice axioms and minor operations without importing uniqueness from prior author work or renaming known results.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard axioms of matroid theory including flats, circuits, and minors
Reference graph
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