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didericis 984655fd3d Resolve n=21 boundary: all four open Holton-McKay duals are bridge-derived
Backward bridge-switch search (sharded over valid parity partitions) found
an Even Level Graph witness for each of the four previously-open duals:
  dual 0: partition 12, witness orbit 9458
  dual 3: partition  9, witness orbit  388
  dual 4: partition 23, witness orbit 3842
  dual 5: partition 12, witness orbit 165668
So all four are bridge-derived level graphs, hence valid derived level
graphs. Combined with the two duals that are Even Level Graphs outright,
the disjunction is now confirmed for ALL SIX critical iso classes at n=21
-- the first nontrivial test of the conjecture passes.

Why it worked where exhaustion failed: a witness, when it exists, tends to
sit in a SMALL orbit (here a few hundred to ~1.7e5 states) reachable
quickly, while other parity partitions of the same triangulation have
orbits >1e6. We only need one good partition. The bridge restriction both
shrinks orbits ~100x and guarantees validity, so any ELG found in a
backward orbit is an immediate witness.

- Update paper n=21 subsection to report the resolution.
- Add shard_hunt.py (partition-sharded parallel witness hunt).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-22 10:50:13 -04:00

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\begin{document}
\title{Even Level Graph Generators}
% Remove any unused author tags.
% author one information
\author{Eric Bauerfeld}
\address{}
\curraddr{}
\email{}
\thanks{}
\subjclass[2010]{Primary }
\keywords{}
\date{}
\dedicatory{}
\begin{abstract}
\end{abstract}
\maketitle
\section{Introduction}
\section{Definitions}
Throughout, $G = (V, E)$ is a plane maximal planar graph (a triangulation)
with a fixed planar embedding $\Pi_G$. We write $|V| = n$, so $|E| = 3n - 6$
and $G$ has $2n - 4$ triangular faces.
\begin{definition}[Level source]
A \emph{level source} of $G$ is any vertex $v \in V$; we write
$S = \{v\}$ for the level-0 source.
\end{definition}
\begin{definition}[Levels]
Given a level source $S \subseteq V$, the \emph{level} of $v \in V$ is
$\ell_G(v) = \mathrm{dist}_G(v, S)$, the graph distance from $v$ to the nearest
source vertex.
\end{definition}
\begin{figure}[h]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=0.55\textwidth]{fig_levels.png}
\caption{BFS levels from the degree-$3$ vertex source $S = \{4\}$.
The source is level $0$, its three neighbours are level $1$, and the
remaining vertices are level $2$. Colour encodes the level.}
\label{fig:levels}
\end{figure}
\begin{definition}[Level cycle]
A \emph{level cycle} of $G$ (with respect to a level source $S$) is a
simple cycle in $G$ all of whose vertices have the same level.
\end{definition}
\begin{figure}[h]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=0.55\textwidth]{fig_level_cycle.png}
\caption{A level cycle in the triangulation of Figure~\ref{fig:levels}.
The triangle $1\!-\!2\!-\!3$ is a simple cycle whose three vertices all
lie at level $1$, so it is a level cycle at level $1$.}
\label{fig:level-cycle}
\end{figure}
\begin{definition}[Edge switch]
\label{def:edge-switch}
Let $G$ be a triangulation with level source $S$, and let $e = uv$ be an
edge of a level cycle of $G$. The \emph{edge switch} at $e$ is the edge
flip on $e$: writing $uvw$ and $uvx$ for the two triangular faces of $G$
containing $e$, the edge $uv$ is removed and the edge $wx$ is added. As
with any edge flip, the result is a triangulation on the same vertex set
provided $w$ and $x$ are non-adjacent in $G$.
\end{definition}
\begin{figure}[h]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=0.95\textwidth]{fig_edge_switch.png}
\caption{An edge switch on the level cycle of
Figure~\ref{fig:level-cycle}. The chosen cycle edge $1\!-\!2$ is shared
by the triangular faces $(0,1,2)$ and $(1,2,4)$; the switch deletes
$1\!-\!2$ (red, left) and inserts $0\!-\!4$ (green, right). Vertex
colours indicate the original levels in $G$.}
\label{fig:edge-switch}
\end{figure}
\begin{definition}[Parity subgraph]
Let $G$ be a triangulation with level source $S$, and let $G'$ be a triangulation
on the same vertex set as $G$. The \emph{even parity subgraph} $E_{G,S}(G')$ is
the subgraph of $G'$ induced by $\{v \in V : \ell_G(v) \equiv 0 \pmod 2\}$. The
\emph{odd parity subgraph} is defined analogously for odd $\ell_G$.
\end{definition}
\begin{figure}[h]
\centering
\includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{fig_parity_subgraph.png}
\caption{Parity subgraphs of $G' = T$ with respect to the level structure of
Figure~\ref{fig:levels} (here we take $G = G' = T$). Left: $T$ with vertices
coloured by $\ell_G \bmod 2$ (blue $=$ even, orange $=$ odd). Middle: the
even parity subgraph $E_{G,S}(G')$, induced on $\{0, 4, 5, 6\}$; only
edges with both endpoints even appear. Right: the odd parity subgraph
$O_{G,S}(G')$, induced on $\{1, 2, 3\}$; the highlighted triangle shows
that $O_{G,S}(G')$ is not bipartite for this choice of $G'$.}
\label{fig:parity-subgraph}
\end{figure}
\section{Outerplanarity of level components}
\label{sec:outerplanar-components}
For each integer $k \geq 0$ and each $(G, S)$, write $L_k$ for the
subgraph of $G$ induced by the level-$k$ vertices. A \emph{level
component} of $G$ (with respect to $S$) is a connected component of
some $L_k$.
\begin{theorem}
\label{thm:outerplanar-component}
For every plane triangulation $G$ and every level source $S$ of $G$,
every level component of $G$ is outerplanar.
\end{theorem}
\begin{proof}
Since every subgraph of an outerplanar graph is outerplanar, it suffices
to show that each level subgraph $L_k$ is outerplanar. For $k = 0$,
$L_0 = S$ is a single vertex and is trivially outerplanar.
Fix $k \geq 1$ and let $D_k$ be the drawing of $L_k$ inherited from
$\Pi_G$. Let $F^\ast$ be the face of $D_k$ containing the source.
Suppose for contradiction that some $u \in L_k$ does not lie on
$\partial F^\ast$, so $u$ lies on the boundary of some other face of
$D_k$. Take any path $P$ in $G$ from $v_0 \in S$ to $u$. As a curve in
$\Pi_G$, $P$ starts in $F^\ast$ and ends at a point off $\partial
F^\ast$, so it must transition from $F^\ast$ to a different face of
$D_k$; in a planar embedding this can happen only at a vertex of
$D_k$, that is, at a level-$k$ vertex $w$ on $P$. Either $w \neq u$
(so $P$ has length $\geq \mathrm{dist}_G(S, w) + 1 \geq k + 1$), or
$w = u$ (contradicting $u \notin \partial F^\ast$). Since every
$S$-to-$u$ path has length $\geq k + 1$, $\mathrm{dist}_G(S, u) \geq
k + 1$, contradicting $u \in L_k$.
\end{proof}
\section{Even Level Graphs}
\label{sec:even-level-graphs}
\begin{definition}[Even Level Graph]
\label{def:even-level-graph}
A plane triangulation $G$ with level source $S$ is an \emph{Even Level
Graph} if every level cycle of $G$ has even length.
\end{definition}
\begin{theorem}
\label{thm:even-level-4colorable}
Every Even Level Graph is $4$-colorable.
\end{theorem}
\begin{proof}
Since adjacent vertices in $G$ have levels differing by at most $1$,
any edge between two same-parity endpoints in fact connects two
vertices at the same level. Hence
\[
E_{G,S}(G) \;=\; \bigsqcup_{i \geq 0} L_{2i},
\qquad
O_{G,S}(G) \;=\; \bigsqcup_{i \geq 0} L_{2i+1},
\]
and each $L_k$ is bipartite because its cycles are level cycles of
$G$, which have even length by hypothesis. Choose a $2$-coloring of
$E_{G,S}(G)$ in $\{\text{red}, \text{blue}\}$ and a $2$-coloring of
$O_{G,S}(G)$ in $\{\text{yellow}, \text{green}\}$. Same-parity edges
of $G$ are properly colored by the respective bipartition;
opposite-parity edges connect $\{\text{red}, \text{blue}\}$ to
$\{\text{yellow}, \text{green}\}$. The combined assignment is a
proper $4$-coloring of $G$.
\end{proof}
\begin{definition}[Derived level graph]
\label{def:derived-level-graph}
Let $G$ be an Even Level Graph with level source $S$, and let $E$ and
$O$ denote the edge sets of the even and odd parity subgraphs
$E_{G,S}(G)$ and $O_{G,S}(G)$. A \emph{derived level graph} of $G$ is
a triangulation $G'$ on the same vertex set as $G$ obtained by a
sequence of edge switches (Definition~\ref{def:edge-switch}), each
acting on an edge of $E$ or of $O$. We do not update $E$ or $O$ to
reflect the level structure of intermediate triangulations: throughout
the sequence, an edge is classified as belonging to $E$ (resp.\ $O$) if
and only if both of its endpoints have even (resp.\ odd) level in $G$.
A derived level graph $G'$ is \emph{valid} if both $E_{G,S}(G')$ and
$O_{G,S}(G')$ contain only even cycles.
\end{definition}
\begin{definition}[Bridge switch]
\label{def:bridge-switch}
Let $G'$ be a triangulation reached from an Even Level Graph $G$, with
parity classes inherited from $G$ as in
Definition~\ref{def:derived-level-graph}. An edge switch on an edge
$e \in E \cup O$ of $G'$, replacing $uvw, uvx$ by the edge $wx$, is a
\emph{bridge switch} if either
\begin{itemize}
\item the new edge $wx$ is a cross-parity edge (one endpoint even, the
other odd), so $wx$ enters neither parity subgraph; or
\item $wx$ is a same-parity edge and is a \emph{bridge} in the parity
subgraph it joins -- that is, $w$ and $x$ lie in different connected
components of that parity subgraph, so adding $wx$ creates no new cycle.
\end{itemize}
\end{definition}
\begin{definition}[Bridge-derived level graph]
\label{def:bridge-derived-level-graph}
A \emph{bridge-derived level graph} of an Even Level Graph $G$ is a
triangulation obtained from $G$ by a sequence of bridge switches
(Definition~\ref{def:bridge-switch}).
\end{definition}
Because a bridge switch never closes a cycle in a parity subgraph, it
never introduces an odd cycle there. As an Even Level Graph has
bipartite parity subgraphs (every level cycle is even), every
bridge-derived level graph has bipartite parity subgraphs as well, and
so is automatically a valid derived level graph. Equivalently, the
first Betti number of each parity subgraph is non-increasing along any
sequence of bridge switches.
\begin{definition}[Intertwining tree]
\label{def:intertwining-tree}
A maximal planar graph $G$ is an \emph{intertwining tree} if its
vertex set can be partitioned into two sets $A$ and $B$ such that
both induced subgraphs $G[A]$ and $G[B]$ are trees.
\end{definition}
\begin{theorem}
\label{thm:intertwining-iff-hamiltonian-dual}
A maximal planar graph $G$ is an intertwining tree if and only if its
dual $G^\ast$ has a Hamiltonian cycle.
\end{theorem}
\begin{proof}
($\Rightarrow$) Let $V(G) = A \sqcup B$ with $G[A]$ and $G[B]$ trees.
Every triangular face $\{x,y,z\}$ of $G$ meets both $A$ and $B$: if all
three vertices were in $A$ the triangle would be a cycle in the tree
$G[A]$, and likewise for $B$. Draw a closed curve through the faces of
$G$ separating the $A$-vertices from the $B$-vertices within each face.
Since every face is split, the curve visits every face exactly once and
crosses an edge of $G$ precisely when that edge joins $A$ to $B$; it is
therefore a Hamiltonian cycle of $G^\ast$.
($\Leftarrow$) Let $H$ be a Hamiltonian cycle of $G^\ast$. Drawn in the
plane, $H$ is a Jordan curve visiting every face of $G$ once; let $A$
and $B$ be the vertices of $G$ interior and exterior to $H$. The
$2n-4$ edges of $H$ cross exactly the edges of $G$ between $A$ and $B$,
leaving $(3n-6)-(2n-4) = n-2$ edges inside $G[A]$ and $G[B]$ together.
The edges inside $A$ lie in the disk bounded by $H$ and span $A$
without enclosing a face (each face is cut by $H$), so $G[A]$ is a tree;
likewise $G[B]$.
\end{proof}
\begin{conjecture}
\label{conj:every-triangulation-derived}
Every maximal planar graph is a valid derived level graph of some Even
Level Graph, an intertwining tree, or both.
\end{conjecture}
By Theorem~\ref{thm:intertwining-iff-hamiltonian-dual}, the
intertwining-tree disjunct fails for $G$ exactly when $G^\ast$ is a
counterexample to Tait's conjecture. The smallest such $G^\ast$ have
$38$ vertices (Holton--McKay~\cite{holton-mckay}, exactly $6$ graphs),
so the smallest triangulations that are not intertwining trees occur at
$n = 21$ and there are exactly $6$ of them. Below $n = 21$ every
maximal planar graph is an intertwining tree, which is why the
disjunction holds trivially in that range.
\subsection*{Empirical status}
For each isomorphism class of maximal planar graphs on $n$ vertices,
we ask whether (i) some isomorphic representative is reachable from
some Even Level Graph via $E/O$-edge switches (``derived''), and/or
(ii) it is an intertwining tree. The conjecture holds for the class
iff at least one of (i), (ii) holds.
\begin{center}
\begin{tabular}{rcccccc}
$n$ & \# iso & derived only & inter.\ only & both & missing & status \\\hline
$6$ & $2$ & $0$ & $0$ & $2$ & $0$ & holds \\
$7$ & $5$ & $0$ & $0$ & $5$ & $0$ & holds \\
$8$ & $14$ & $0$ & $0$ & $14$ & $0$ & holds \\
$9$ & $50$ & $0$ & $1$ & $49$ & $0$ & holds \\
$10$ & $233$ & $0$ & $0$ & $233$ & $0$ & holds \\
$11$ & $1249$ & $0$ & $0$ & $1249$ & $0$ & holds \\
$12$ & $7595$ & $0$ & $1$ & $7594$ & $0$ & holds \\
\end{tabular}
\end{center}
\subsection*{The boundary case $n = 21$}
The first triangulations that are \emph{not} intertwining trees are the
six duals of the Holton--McKay graphs, at $n = 21$. For the disjunction
to survive at $n = 21$, each of these six must be a valid derived level
graph. We find:
\begin{itemize}
\item All six duals are confirmed not intertwining trees (exhaustive
check of all $2^{20}-1$ vertex bipartitions), consistent with
Theorem~\ref{thm:intertwining-iff-hamiltonian-dual}.
\item Two of the six are themselves Even Level Graphs (for a suitable
source vertex), hence trivially valid derived level graphs. So the
disjunction holds for them through the derived-level-graph disjunct --
the first instances where that disjunct does work the intertwining-tree
disjunct cannot.
\item The remaining four are not Even Level Graphs for any source, and
their full $E/O$-orbits ($\sim\!10^8$ states per source labelling) are
far too large to exhaust. Restricting to \emph{bridge switches}
(Definition~\ref{def:bridge-switch}) shrinks the relevant orbits by
roughly two orders of magnitude and, crucially, keeps every reachable
triangulation valid. A backward bridge-switch search over the valid
parity partitions found an Even Level Graph witness for each of the
four, so all four are \emph{bridge-derived level graphs}
(Definition~\ref{def:bridge-derived-level-graph}) and hence valid
derived level graphs. The witnessing orbits are small -- between a few
hundred and $\sim\!1.7\times 10^5$ states -- even though other parity
partitions of the same triangulations have orbits exceeding $10^6$;
finding one good partition suffices.
\end{itemize}
Thus at $n = 21$ the disjunction is confirmed for all six critical iso
classes: two are Even Level Graphs outright, and the other four are
bridge-derived level graphs. The bridge-switch restriction is what made
the search tractable -- it both shrinks the orbit and guarantees
validity, so any Even Level Graph located in a backward orbit is an
immediate witness.
\begin{thebibliography}{9}
\bibitem{holton-mckay}
D.~A. Holton and B.~D. McKay.
\emph{The smallest non-Hamiltonian 3-connected cubic planar graphs have
38 vertices}.
Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series B, 45(3):305--319, 1988.
\end{thebibliography}
\end{document}