On prisms, M\"obius ladders and the cycle space of dense graphs
Peter C. Heinig

TL;DR
This paper investigates conditions under which dense graphs have their cycle space generated by Hamilton circuits, providing asymptotic results and confirming parts of a longstanding conjecture in graph theory.
Contribution
It proves that dense graphs with high minimum degree are Hamilton-generated or nearly so, advancing understanding of the cycle space structure in dense graphs.
Findings
Graphs with degree > (1/2 + s)f_0 are Hamilton-generated if f_0 is odd.
For even f_0, Hamilton circuits generate a codimension-one subspace.
Square bipartite graphs with degree > (1/4 + s)f_0 are Hamilton-generated.
Abstract
For a graph X, let f_0(X) denote its number of vertices, d(X) its minimum degree and Z_1(X;Z/2) its cycle space in the standard graph-theoretical sense (i.e. 1-dimensional cycle group in the sense of simplicial homology theory with Z/2-coefficients). Call a graph Hamilton-generated if and only if the set of all Hamilton circuits is a Z/2-generating system for Z_1(X;Z/2). The main purpose of this paper is to prove the following: for every s > 0 there exists n_0 such that for every graph X with f_0(X) >= n_0 vertices, (1) if d(X) >= (1/2 + s) f_0(X) and f_0(X) is odd, then X is Hamilton-generated, (2) if d(X) >= (1/2 + s) f_0(X) and f_0(X) is even, then the set of all Hamilton circuits of X generates a codimension-one subspace of Z_1(X;Z/2), and the set of all circuits of X having length either f_0(X)-1 or f_0(X) generates all of Z_1(X;Z/2), (3) if d(X) >= (1/4 + s) f_0(X) and X is square…
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