609 research outputs found

    Constrained Ramsey Numbers

    Full text link
    For two graphs S and T, the constrained Ramsey number f(S, T) is the minimum n such that every edge coloring of the complete graph on n vertices, with any number of colors, has a monochromatic subgraph isomorphic to S or a rainbow (all edges differently colored) subgraph isomorphic to T. The Erdos-Rado Canonical Ramsey Theorem implies that f(S, T) exists if and only if S is a star or T is acyclic, and much work has been done to determine the rate of growth of f(S, T) for various types of parameters. When S and T are both trees having s and t edges respectively, Jamison, Jiang, and Ling showed that f(S, T) <= O(st^2) and conjectured that it is always at most O(st). They also mentioned that one of the most interesting open special cases is when T is a path. In this work, we study this case and show that f(S, P_t) = O(st log t), which differs only by a logarithmic factor from the conjecture. This substantially improves the previous bounds for most values of s and t.Comment: 12 pages; minor revision

    Rainbow Generalizations of Ramsey Theory - A Dynamic Survey

    Get PDF
    In this work, we collect Ramsey-type results concerning rainbow edge colorings of graphs

    Rainbow Generalizations of Ramsey Theory - A Dynamic Survey

    Get PDF
    In this work, we collect Ramsey-type results concerning rainbow edge colorings of graphs

    Rainbow Generalizations of Ramsey Theory - A Dynamic Survey

    Get PDF
    In this work, we collect Ramsey-type results concerning rainbow edge colorings of graphs

    The threshold for the constrained Ramsey property

    Full text link
    Given graphs GG, H1H_1, and H2H_2, let G→mr(H1,H2)G\xrightarrow{\text{mr}}(H_1,H_2) denote the property that in every edge colouring of GG there is a monochromatic copy of H1H_1 or a rainbow copy of H2H_2. The constrained Ramsey number, defined as the minimum nn such that Kn→mr(H1,H2)K_n\xrightarrow{\text{mr}}(H_1,H_2), exists if and only if H1H_1 is a star or H2H_2 is a forest. We determine the threshold for the property G(n,p)→mr(H1,H2)G(n,p)\xrightarrow{\text{mr}}(H_1,H_2) when H2H_2 is a forest, explicitly when the threshold is Ω(n−1)\Omega(n^{-1}) and implicitly otherwise.Comment: 15 page
    • …
    corecore