1. Introduction
In this paper, we continue the study of Steiner configurations of points and their invariants, such as Hilbert Function, Betti numbers, Waldschmidt constant, regularity and resurgence found in [
1]. We will focus on the Containment problem, and we will show that the Stable Harbourne Conjecture and the Stable Harbourne–Huneke Conjecture hold for the defining ideal of a Complement of a Steiner configuration of points in
. As pointed out in Remarks 2.5 and 2.6 in [
1] in the language of Algebraic Geometry/Commutative Algebra, Steiner configurations of points and their Complement are special subsets of star configurations.
First, we give an overview on the Containment problem to introduce the related conjectures. Then, we devote
Section 2 to recall notation, definitions and known results for a Steiner configuration of points and its Complement that we will use to prove the results of this paper. Let
I be a homogeneous ideal in the standard graded polynomial ring
, where
k is a field. Given an integer
m, we denote by
the regular power of the ideal
I. The
m-th
symbolic power of
I is defined as
where
denotes the set of associated primes of
I and
is the localization of
R at a prime ideal
.
If
I is a radical ideal (this includes for instance square-free monomial ideals and ideals of finite sets of points), then
Symbolic powers of ideals play a significant role in the famous Zariski–Nagata Theorem (see in [
2,
3]). If
R is a polynomial ring over an algebraically closed field
k, then
consists precisely of those functions which vanish on the algebraic variety defined by
I with multiplicity at least
m. It is easy to show from the definition that
if and only if
. The reverse inclusion
motivates the following question.
Question 1 (Containment problem). Given a homogeneous ideal , for which pairs , does hold?
One of the initial works that introduce Question 1 is [
4]. The problem is still open in general and in the last couple of decades it was extensively studied for several classes of ideals, in particular for ideals defining finite sets of points in projective and multiprojective spaces, see in [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15] just to cite some among all the known results. Containment problems are useful in giving lower bounds to non-zero homogeneous forms vanishing through a finite set of points with a fixed multiplicity.
It is of great interest to study the ideals of fat points. Given distinct points and non-negative integers (not all 0), let denote the scheme (called a fat point scheme) defined by the ideal , where is the ideal generated by all homogeneous polynomials vanishing at . Symbolic powers of take the form . We say that Z is reduced if is a radical ideal.
The Containment problem also helps us to bound certain useful invariants like Waldschmidt constant,
, of an ideal
I defined as
where
is the minimum integer
d such that
, that is, it is the least degree of a minimal generator of
I. This limit exists and was first defined by Waldschmidt [
16] for ideals of finite sets of points in the context of complex analysis; specifically, in our language, the problem was to determine the minimal degree of a hypersurface that passed through a collection of points with prescribed multiplicities.
The following slight different version of Question 1 was introduced in [
17]. Recall that the
big height of an ideal
I refers to the maximum of all the heights of its associated prime ideals.
Conjecture 1. Let be a fat point scheme and the ideal defining Z. Let be the graded maximal ideal. Then, holds for all .
B. Harbourne conjectured in [
18]:
Conjecture 2. Given a non-zero, proper, homogeneous, radical ideal with big height h, for all
A counterexample to the above conjecture was initially found in [
19].
A celebrated result of the works in [
9,
15,
20] is shown in the next theorem.
Theorem 1. Let R be a regular ring and I a radical ideal in R. Then, for all ,whenever h is the big height of I. One could hope to sharpen the containment by reducing the symbolic power on the left hand side by a constant or increasing the ordinary power on the right hand side by a fixed constant. This motivates us to look at stable versions of Conjectures 2.1 and 4.1 in [
17], respectively.
Conjecture 3 (Stable Harbourne Conjecture).
Given a non-zero, proper, homogeneous, radical ideal with big height h, thenfor all Conjecture 4 (Stable Harbourne–Huneke Conjecture). Let be a homogeneous radical ideal of big height h. Let be the graded maximal ideal. Then, for ,
- 1.
- 2.
.
In the study of finding the least degree of minimal generators of an ideal I, Chudnovsky made the following conjecture.
Conjecture 5 (Chudnovsky’s Conjecture).
Suppose that k is an algebraically closed field of characteristic 0. Let I be the defining ideal of a set of points . Then, for all , A generalization of Chudnovsky’s Conjecture is the following.
Conjecture 6 (Demailly’s Conjecture).
Suppose that k is an algebraically closed field of characteristic 0. Let I be the defining ideal of a set of points and let be any integer. Then, for all , Two recent preprints [
21,
22] focus on the Containment problem and related conjectures. In the first one, the authors show that Chudnovsky’s Conjecture holds for sufficiently many general points, and to prove it they show that one of the containments conjectured by Harbourne and Huneke holds eventually, meaning for large powers (see Theorem 4.6 in [
21]). They also show other related results, for example, that general sets of points have expected resurgence and thus satisfy the Stable Harbourne Conjecture.
In the second preprint, the authors show that Demailly’s Conjecture (which is a generalization of Chudnovsky’s) also holds for sufficiently many general points, for star configurations (in general, not just points) and for generic determinantal ideals.
In this paper, we prove that the Stable Harbourne Conjecture and the Stable Harbourne–Huneke Conjecture hold for ideals defining the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in
that are special subsets of star configurations and, thus, far from being general. We will give more details in
Section 3.
We remark that the least degree of a minimal generator of the ideal defining the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in
is strictly less than the least degree of a minimal generator of the ideal of a star configurations (see Theorem 2 and also Proposition 2.9 in [
23]). Therefore, it is worth investigating whether the Containment problem and its related conjectures hold for the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in
.
In [
1], the authors constructed a square-free monomial ideal
J associated to a set
X of points in
constructed from the Complement of a Steiner system. The ideal
defining the Complement of a Steiner system is not a monomial ideal. However, the authors proved that the symbolic powers of
and
J share the same homological invariants (see Proposition 3.6 in [
1]). This was possible because
J is the Stanley–Reisner ideal of a matroid, so its symbolic powers define an arithmetically Cohen–Macaulay (ACM) scheme which gives, after proper hyperplane sections, the scheme of fat points supported on
X. However, we point out that the
regular powers of
J are not necessarily ACM any more and we cannot relate them to square-free monomial ideals. Thus, the homological invariants of the regular powers of
J are not immediately correlated to that of
.
In [
8], the authors proved that the Chudnovsky’s Conjecture, the Harbourne’s Conjecture and the Harbourne–Huneke containment conjectures hold for square-free monomial ideals.
As previously remarked, as the ideal
defining the Complement of a Steiner system is not a square-free monomial ideal, we cannot recover the Stable Harbourne Conjecture and the Stable Harbourne—Huneke Conjecture using the method in [
8].
We also point out that the two above preprints [
21,
22] do not compute the Waldschmidt constant exactly for any class of ideals, they study lower bounds for the Waldschmidt constant. Furthermore, as in [
1] the authors found the exact value of the Waldschmidt constant for the Complement of a Steiner configurations of points, then Chudnovsky and Demailly’s Conjectures easily follow for our class of ideals (see
Section 3).
For other results on this topic we can also see [
24,
25].
Another tool useful to measure the non-containment among symbolic and ordinary powers of ideals is the notion of
resurgence of an ideal
I, introduced in [
6] that gives some notion of how small the ratio
can be and still be sure to have
.
Definition 1. Let I be a non-zero, proper ideal in a commutative ring R, the resurgence of the ideal I is given by It always satisfies
. The groundbreaking results of [
9,
15,
20] show that
, where
h is the big height of the radical ideal
I. This motivates us to ask whether
can strictly be less than its big height and which are some of the interesting consequences. Although there are few cases where the resurgence has been computed, in general, it is extremely difficult to estimate the exact value for
. The reader can look at [
26] for the first examples where the resurgence and the asymptotic resurgence are not equal. An asymptotic version of the resurgence was introduced in the paper [
12].
Definition 2. For a non-zero, proper homogeneous ideal , the asymptotic resurgence is defined as It is clear from the definition that
. As pointed out in [
27], DiPasquale, Francisco, Mermin and Schweig showed that
, where
is the integral closure of
(see also [
28] Corollary 4.14).
In this paper, we study the containment properties of the ideal defining a Complement of a Steiner configuration of points in
.
Section 2 is devoted to recall notation, definitions and known results from the work in [
1] that we will use in the next sections. The main result of
Section 3 is Theorem 4 where we prove that an ideal defining the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in
satisfies both the Stable Harbourne Conjecture and the Stable Harbourne–Huneke Conjecture. In Lemma 1, we give a criterion for when the resurgence number can be computed in finite number of steps. This result improves the bounds found in Corollary 4.8 in [
1]. We also point out that Lemma 1 is similar to results from the work in [
28,
29]. As a consequence, in Corollary 4 we show that the ideal of a Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points has expected resurgence, that is, its resurgence is strictly less than its big height (see in [
30] for the first definition). Moreover, using Theorem 2, Corollaries 1 and 2, we show that the ideal of a Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points satisfies Chudnovsky and Demailly’s Conjectures (see Corollaries 2, 5 and 6).
Finally, in
Section 4, given a hypergraph
H, we also study the relation between its colourability and the failure of the Containment problem for the cover ideal associated to
H. The ideas come from the paper [
31] where the authors start to study the natural one-to-one correspondence between square-free monomial ideals and finite simple hypergraphs via the cover ideal construction.
There exists an extensive literature on the subject of colourings both from Design Theory and Algebraic Geometry/Commutative Algebra point of view. Among all, we make use of the works in [
31,
32,
33,
34,
35] as some referring texts for preliminaries on hypergraph theory and associated primes and for an algebraic method to compute the chromatic number, respectively.
Most of the existing papers are devoted to the case of weak colourings (or vertex colourings), i.e., colourings where the colours are assigned to the elements in such a way that no hyperedge is monochromatic (i.e., no hyperedge has all its elements assigned the same colour). The reader can see [
34] or Chapter 3 in [
32] for other different types of colouring a hypergraph, such as
strong vertex colouring, vertex equicolouring, good colouring of H.
In this paper, we use the case of weak colouring to get result on the Containment problem as it is the one commonly used in Combinatorial Commutative Algebra. The main result of this section is Theorem 5, which more generally predicts the failure of the containment for square-free monomial ideals based on the definition of coverability (see Definition 9). We apply these results in the case that H is a Steiner System.
We end the paper recalling some open questions posed in [
1] and that are still under investigations and posing new ones as possible further research problems.
2. Notation, Definitions and Known Results for Ideals of a Steiner Configuration of Points and Its Complement
In this section, we recall the main results from in [
1], where the authors studied the homological properties of ideals constructed from Steiner systems, especially in the zero-dimensional case of
.
A Steiner system of type is a collection B of n-subsets (blocks) of a v-set V such that each t-tuple of V is contained in a unique block in B. The elements in V are called vertices or points and those of B are called blocks. In particular, a Steiner triple system of order v, , is a collection of triples (3-subsets) of V, such that each unordered pair of elements is contained in precisely one block, and a Steiner quadruple system of order v, , is a collection of quadruples (4-subsets) of V such that each triple is found in precisely one block.
The existence of a Steiner system strongly depends on the parameters
. If a Steiner system
of type
exists, then
We use the works in [
36,
37] as the main references for all the background on design theory.
We recall the most known example.
Example 1. One of the simplest and most known example of Steiner system is the Fano Plane. It is unique up to isomorphism and it is a Steiner system with block set For the ease of the reader, we recall some definitions and results from in [
1].
Let and be a collection of distinct hyperplanes of , where . Say defined by the linear forms for . Assume that any n hyperplanes in meet properly, i.e., they meet in a point. There is a natural way to associate a point in to a subset of n elements of V. For , we denote by the point obtained by intersecting the hyperplanes Then, the ideal is the vanishing ideal of the point .
Definition 3. Let Y be a collection of subsets of V containing n elements, and a set of hyperplanes meeting properly. We define the following set of points in with respect to and its defining ideal Denoted by the set containing all the subsets of V with n elements the above definition applied to a Steiner system gives us two different sets of points.
Definition 4. Let be a Steiner system of type with . We associate to B the following set of points in and its defining idealWe call the Steiner configuration of points associated to the Steiner system of type with respect to (or just if there is no ambiguity). Definition 5. Let be a Steiner system of type with . We associate to the following set of points in and its defining idealWe call the Complement of a Steiner configuration of points with respect to (or C-Steiner if there is no ambiguity). As pointed out in [
1], Remarks 2.5 and 2.6 a Steiner configuration of points and its Complement are subschemes of a star configuration of
points in
(see in [
23,
38,
39,
40] just to cite some reference on star configurations).
We recall the most known construction of Steiner Configuration of points and its Complement.
Example 2. Consider the Steiner configuration associated to of type as in Example 1. Take a collection of 7 distinct hyperplanes in defined by a linear form for , respectively, with the property that any 3 of them meet in a point , where . We get that is a star configuration of points in , is a Steiner configuration consisting of 7 points in and is a C-Steiner configuration consisting of points in Their defining ideals are, respectively, In [
1], the authors constructed a square-free monomial ideal
J associated to a set
of points in
constructed from the Complement of a Steiner system. The ideal
defining the Complement of a Steiner system is not a monomial ideal. However, the authors proved that the symbolic powers of
and
J share the same homological invariants (see Proposition 3.6 in [
1]).
The following results give the least degree of a minimal generator and the regularity and the Waldschmidt constant of an ideal defining the Complement of a Steiner configuration of points, respectively.
Theorem 2 (Ref. [
1], Theorem 3.9).
Let be a Steiner system of type . Set the ideal defining the Complement of the Steiner configuration of points associated to . Then,- (i)
;
- (ii)
for ;
- (iii)
, where and and .
Corollary 1 (Ref. [
1], Corollary 4.2).
Let be the regularity of a Complement of a Steiner configuration. Then, . Corollary 2 (Ref. [
1], Corollary 3.12).
If is a Steiner system of type , then the Waldschmidt constant of its Complement is . 3. Asymptotic Resurgence and Stable Harbourne Conjecture
Containment problems have been of interest among commutative algebraists and algebraic geometers. In the last decade, several conjectures related to this problem have been posed creating an active area of current interests and outgoing investigations.
A celebrated result of the works in [
9,
15,
20] is that
for all
, whenever
h is the big height of
I. One could hope to sharpen the containment by reducing the symbolic power on the left hand side by a constant or increasing the ordinary power on the right hand side by a fixed constant. This motivates us to look at the Stable Harbourne Conjecture and the Stable Harbourne–Huneke Conjecture and study which class of ideals satisfies them. Here, we prove that the ideal defining a Complement of a Steiner configurations of points satisfies both conjectures. We need to recall some known results.
In [
41], the Conjecture 3 is shown to hold
- 1.
if there exists such that ;
- 2.
if for some k and for all ; and
- 3.
if the resurgence satisfies .
In particular, condition (2) gives a criterion for the Stable Harbourne Conjecture (SHC for short) to hold. Namely, for a radical ideal of big height
h, if for all
, it is
and fix an integer
C and
m such that
holds, then for all
, we have
that is,
.
Theorem 3 (Theorem 2.5, ref. [
41]).
Let R be a regular ring containing a field, and let I be a radical ideal in R with big height h. If for some , then for all (indeed for all ). We have learned that Harbourne, Kettinger and Zimmitti in [
27] and DiPasquale and Drabkin in [
29] proved independently that
if and only if
. As pointed out in [
29] Remark 2.3, the next result is similar as Proposition 4.1.3 of Denkert’s thesis [
42], as Lemma 4.12 in [
28] and as Proposition 2.2 in [
29].
For the ease of the reader, we adapt the proof in our case.
Lemma 1. Let be a homogeneous radical ideal with , such that . Suppose we have the equalityfor some . Then can be computed by taking the maximum of finitely many with . Proof. Using Briancon Skoda Theorem (Corollary 13.3.4 in [
43]), we have that
, where
is the number of variables in the polynomial ring and
denotes the integral closure of the ideal
I. For
such that
then
. Using [
28], Lemma 4.12, we get
, that is,
If
, applying [
29] Proposition 2.2, then there exist
, such that
and
solving for
r gives us the inequality
so whenever
and
s is such that
, we have
.
Therefore, it suffices to look at
and
. □
Corollary 3. If the resurgence can be computed by taking the maximum of finitely many ratios of the form for which , then .
Proof. Suppose we have
, then
is a contradiction as
for all
(from in [
9,
15,
20]). Hence,
. □
The next proposition shows that Conjecture 3.1 in [
44] holds for the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points.
Proposition 1. Let be an ideal defining a Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points and let be the homogeneous maximal ideal. Then holds for all
Proof. From Theorem 2, we have
. From [
1], Corollary 4.7, we have
, where
is the maximum of the generating degrees of the ideal
I. As
for all
, we have
and
, so
=
. As every minimal generator of
is contained inside
and the difference between the degree of any nonzero homogeneous polynomial in
and that of generators of
is at least
, we have that
, the conclusion follows. □
We prove the main result of this section:
Theorem 4. Let be the ideal defining the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in . Then, I satisfies
- 1.
Stable Harbourne–Huneke Conjecture;
- 2.
Stable Harbourne Conjecture.
Proof. (1) Consider the Steiner Configuration of points in and the ideal defining its Complement.
Using Theorem 2, (iii), it is
. Using Corollary 1, and choosing
, such that
we get
Moreover, as
, we get
Using Euler’s Formula, we get
(2) We have the containment for .
Let
. From [
45], we have
letting
.
Let
for
and let
and
. Therefore,
Therefore, for . □
As a consequence, we can show that the ideal of a Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points has expected resurgence, that is, its resurgence is strictly less than its big height (see [
30]).
Corollary 4. Let be the ideal defining the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in . Then,
Proof. From Theorem 4, we have . Note that . If , then clearly . On the other hand, if , then from Lemma 1 and Corollary 3, we conclude that □
We give an alternative proof of Chudnovky’s Conjecture:
Corollary 5. Let be the ideal defining the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in . Then, Chudnovky’s Conjecture holds for I.
Proof. From Theorem 2, item (i)
and from Theorem 2 it is
. Then,
□
Corollary 6. Let be the ideal defining the Complement of a Steiner Configuration of points in . Then, Demailly’s Conjecture holds for I.
Proof. From Theorem 2, for and for it is . From Corollary 2, we have that . Therefore, whenever
- 1.
, with
, we have
- 2.
and
, we have
- 3.
and
, we have
□
Remark 1. Chudnovsky’s Conjecture can be showed from Proposition 1. We have that . This gives us the inequality . Dividing both sides by and letting gives 4. Containment and Colouring
In this section, we focus on the relation between the colourability of a hypergraph
H and the failure of the containment problem for the cover ideal associated to
H. Then, we apply these results in the case that
H is a Steiner System. There exists an extensive literature on the subject of colourings both from Design Theory and Algebraic Geometry/Commutative Algebra point of view. Among all, we make use of [
31,
32,
33,
34,
35] as some of referring texts.
Most of the existing papers are devoted to the case of weak colourings (or vertex colourings), i.e., colourings where the colours are assigned to the elements in such a way that no hyperedge is monochromatic (i.e., no hyperedge has all its elements assigned the same colour). The reader can see [
34] or Chapter 3 in [
32] for other types of colouring a hypergraph, such as
strong vertex colouring, vertex equicolouring, good colouring of H.
In this paper, we use the case of weak colouring to get results on Containment problem.
We first recall some known definitions and results from [
32] or [
34], Chapter 2.
A hypergraph is a pair , where is a finite nonempty set containing n elements called vertices and (I set of indices) is a family of subsets of X, called edges, or otherwise hyperedges, such that for all and .
A colouring of a hypergraph is a surjective mapping where C is the set of colours. When , then a proper m-colouring of a hypergraph is a mapping for which every edge has at least two vertices of different colours.
As for graphs, proper colourings generate partitions of the vertex set into a number of stable (independent) non-empty subsets called colour classes, with as many classes as the number of colours actually used.
Thus, we use an equivalent definition from [
31,
33], used in Combinatorial Algebraic Geometry/Commutative Algebra research, i.e.,
Definition 6. Let be a hypergraph. An m-colouring of H is any partition of into m disjoint sets such that for every we have for all . The ’s are called the colour classes.
The chromatic number of H, denoted by , is the minimum m such that H has an m-colouring.
Definition 7. A hypergraph is m-colourable if there exists a proper m-colouring, i.e., if .
Definition 8. We say H is m-chromatic if it is m-colourable but not -colourable.
When , the hypergraph H is called bicolourable. (In parts of the literature the term “bipartite” is also used.)
Definition 9. Let be a hypergraph. For an integer we say that H is c-coverable if there exists a partition of V such that for each and for each
Remark 2. Note that, as an immediate consequence of the above definitions, if H is c-coverable, , then H is c-colourable.
Example 3. Set . Let H be the set of blocks of a Take, for instance, the partition (see Figure 1). H is 3-colourable but it is not 3-coverable. Notice also that no colouring of H with two colours exists. Then .
Remark 3. We refer the reader to Section 3.5 in [32] to see examples of different types of colourings that give different chromatic numbers for the same H. In particular, in Example 8 of [32], the strongvertex colouring of H as in (1) gives (recall that a mapping c is a strong colouring of vertices of H if for all it is ). For a non-empty hypergraph
H, i.e.,
, we define the ideal
called the
cover ideal of
where for a subset of
V,
the ideal
denotes the prime ideal generated by the variables indexed by
.
For a hypergraph , we denote by
We study some properties of the cover ideals of B. The following results show a relation between the coverability of a hypergraph H and that the Containment problem can fail.
Theorem 5. Let be a hypergraph. If H is not d-coverable then
Proof. We put and . In order to prove the statement it is enough to show that but For each the ideal has height . Therefore . Thus, for each . This implies By contradiction, assume Thus, there exist such that We , then is a partition of V. Thus, for each we have , therefore with This contradicts that H is not d-coverable. □
Recall that an
m-colouring of
is called an
m-bicolouring if the vertices of each
are coloured with exactly two colours. A Steiner Triple Systems
admitting an
m-bicolouring is
m-bicolourable. Thus, in a bicolouring of a Steiner Triple System
, every triple has two elements in one colour class and one in another class, so there are no monochromatic triples nor polychromatic triples (i.e., triples receiving three colours). For instance, for a deep investigation of colouring properties of Steiner Triple Systems the reader can see [
46].
As a consequence, we get a failure of the containment for the cover ideals associated to Steiner Triple Systems of type
Proposition 2. If and is a Steiner Triple System, then .
Proof. It is enough to show that
B in not 2-coverable. Assume by contradiction
By definition, for each
we have
and
. This implies that
is 2-bicolourable contradicting a well-known fact about Steiner Triple Systems, see in [
47]. □
We end the paper showing the failure of the containment for the cover ideals associated to Steiner Systems.
Proposition 3. Let be a Steiner System with parameters where and . Then,
Proof. Note that, from Theorem 5, it is enough to show that B is not t-coverable. Assume by contradiction there is a partition of V in t colour classes, such that for each and B a block of We denote by the number of elements in for . Note that . Indeed if are different elements, then a block containing cannot intersect t colour classes. This implies . □
The next example shows that Theorem 5 does not characterize the failure of the containment.
Example 4. Let B denote the blocks of a Steiner quadruple system on the vertex set ,
From Proposition 3, B is not 3-coverable. Therefore, Theorem 5 ensures However, one can check that, for instance, so the failure of the containment cannot be motivated from Theorem 5. 5. Conclusions
Several conjectures have been posed on the Containment problem, creating an active area of current interests and ongoing investigations. In this paper, we show that the Stable Harbourne Conjecture and the Stable Harbourne–Huneke Conjecture hold for the defining ideal of a Complement of a Steiner configuration of points in . Moreover, given a hypergraph H, we also study the relation between its colourability and that the Containment problem can fail for the cover ideal associated to H. We wish to continue the study of Steiner configurations of points and their Complements, as they are special subsets of star configurations whose Hilbert Function is the same as sets of generic points while geometrically they are far of being generic.
We end this section recalling some open questions that are still under investigations and posing new ones.
We recall from the work in [
1] that from a combinatorial point of view, two Steiner systems having the same parameters could have very different properties and such differences effect the homological invariants. Using experiments with [
48,
49] we ask:
Question 2. Let be a Steiner system of type , and the associated Steiner configuration of points. Assume that the hyperplanes in are chosen generically. Do the Hilbert function and the graded Betti numbers of only depend on ?
Question 3. Let be a Steiner system of type , and the associated Steiner configuration of points. Assume that the hyperplanes in are chosen generically. Are the Hilbert function and the graded Betti numbers of generic with respect to the Hilbert function? (i.e., the same as a set of generic points in ?)
Given a hypergraph H, we also study the relation between its colourability and the failure of the containment problem for the cover ideal associated to H. We suggest the following.
Question 4. Can different types of colourings of a hypergraph give different answers to the Containment problem and related conjectures?
We also thank one of the referees to point out [
50,
51], where the author studies graph partitioning (fragmentation criteria) that has many fields of applications in engineering, especially in applied sciences as applied chemistry and physics, computer science and automation, electronics and telecommunication. See [
52,
53,
54] just to cite some of them.
Question 5. Can different types of colourings of hypergraphs give also different answers to fragmentation criteria?