750 research outputs found

    3‐Color bipartite Ramsey number of cycles and paths

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    The k-colour bipartite Ramsey number of a bipartite graph H is the least integer n for which every k-edge-coloured complete bipartite graph Kn,n contains a monochromatic copy of H. The study of bipartite Ramsey numbers was initiated, over 40 years ago, by Faudree and Schelp and, independently, by GyÂŽarfÂŽas and Lehel, who determined the 2-colour Ramsey number of paths. In this paper we determine asymptotically the 3-colour bipartite Ramsey number of paths and (even) cycles

    Vertex covers by monochromatic pieces - A survey of results and problems

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    This survey is devoted to problems and results concerning covering the vertices of edge colored graphs or hypergraphs with monochromatic paths, cycles and other objects. It is an expanded version of the talk with the same title at the Seventh Cracow Conference on Graph Theory, held in Rytro in September 14-19, 2014.Comment: Discrete Mathematics, 201

    On globally sparse Ramsey graphs

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    We say that a graph GG has the Ramsey property w.r.t.\ some graph FF and some integer r≄2r\geq 2, or GG is (F,r)(F,r)-Ramsey for short, if any rr-coloring of the edges of GG contains a monochromatic copy of FF. R{\"o}dl and Ruci{\'n}ski asked how globally sparse (F,r)(F,r)-Ramsey graphs GG can possibly be, where the density of GG is measured by the subgraph H⊆GH\subseteq G with the highest average degree. So far, this so-called Ramsey density is known only for cliques and some trivial graphs FF. In this work we determine the Ramsey density up to some small error terms for several cases when FF is a complete bipartite graph, a cycle or a path, and r≄2r\geq 2 colors are available

    Ramsey numbers of ordered graphs

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    An ordered graph is a pair G=(G,â‰ș)\mathcal{G}=(G,\prec) where GG is a graph and â‰ș\prec is a total ordering of its vertices. The ordered Ramsey number R‟(G)\overline{R}(\mathcal{G}) is the minimum number NN such that every ordered complete graph with NN vertices and with edges colored by two colors contains a monochromatic copy of G\mathcal{G}. In contrast with the case of unordered graphs, we show that there are arbitrarily large ordered matchings Mn\mathcal{M}_n on nn vertices for which R‟(Mn)\overline{R}(\mathcal{M}_n) is superpolynomial in nn. This implies that ordered Ramsey numbers of the same graph can grow superpolynomially in the size of the graph in one ordering and remain linear in another ordering. We also prove that the ordered Ramsey number R‟(G)\overline{R}(\mathcal{G}) is polynomial in the number of vertices of G\mathcal{G} if the bandwidth of G\mathcal{G} is constant or if G\mathcal{G} is an ordered graph of constant degeneracy and constant interval chromatic number. The first result gives a positive answer to a question of Conlon, Fox, Lee, and Sudakov. For a few special classes of ordered paths, stars or matchings, we give asymptotically tight bounds on their ordered Ramsey numbers. For so-called monotone cycles we compute their ordered Ramsey numbers exactly. This result implies exact formulas for geometric Ramsey numbers of cycles introduced by K\'arolyi, Pach, T\'oth, and Valtr.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures, to appear in Electronic Journal of Combinatoric
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