Edge-decompositions of graphs with high minimum degree
Ben Barber, Daniela K\"uhn, Allan Lo, Deryk Osthus

TL;DR
This paper extends Wilson's theorem to graphs far from complete, establishing new minimum degree thresholds for decompositions into triangles and cycles, using an innovative iterative absorption method.
Contribution
It introduces a general iterative absorption technique that converts approximate decompositions into exact ones, advancing the understanding of graph decompositions.
Findings
Proves that graphs with minimum degree at least 9n/10+o(n) have a K_3-decomposition.
Determines asymptotic thresholds of 2n/3+o(n) for C_4-decomposition.
Establishes a minimum degree of n/2+o(n) for C_{2} decompositions.
Abstract
A fundamental theorem of Wilson states that, for every graph , every sufficiently large -divisible clique has an -decomposition. Here a graph is -divisible if divides and the greatest common divisor of the degrees of divides the greatest common divisor of the degrees of , and has an -decomposition if the edges of can be covered by edge-disjoint copies of . We extend this result to graphs which are allowed to be far from complete. In particular, together with a result of Dross, our results imply that every sufficiently large -divisible graph of minimum degree at least has a -decomposition. This significantly improves previous results towards the long-standing conjecture of Nash-Williams that every sufficiently large -divisible graph with minimum degree at least has a -decomposition. We also…
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