Abstract

We show that a graph G has a normal spanning tree if and only if its vertex set is the union of countably many sets each separated from any subdivided infinite clique in G by a finite set of vertices. This proves a conjecture by Brochet and Diestel from 1994, giving a common strengthening of two classical normal spanning tree criterions due to Jung and Halin.Moreover, our method gives a new, algorithmic proof of Halin's theorem that every connected graph not containing a subdivision of a countable clique has a normal spanning tree.

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