16,211 research outputs found

    Banach spaces and Ramsey Theory: some open problems

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    We discuss some open problems in the Geometry of Banach spaces having Ramsey-theoretic flavor. The problems are exposed together with well known results related to them.Comment: 17 pages, no figures; RACSAM, to appea

    Ramsey-type theorems for lines in 3-space

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    We prove geometric Ramsey-type statements on collections of lines in 3-space. These statements give guarantees on the size of a clique or an independent set in (hyper)graphs induced by incidence relations between lines, points, and reguli in 3-space. Among other things, we prove that: (1) The intersection graph of n lines in R^3 has a clique or independent set of size Omega(n^{1/3}). (2) Every set of n lines in R^3 has a subset of n^{1/2} lines that are all stabbed by one line, or a subset of Omega((n/log n)^{1/5}) such that no 6-subset is stabbed by one line. (3) Every set of n lines in general position in R^3 has a subset of Omega(n^{2/3}) lines that all lie on a regulus, or a subset of Omega(n^{1/3}) lines such that no 4-subset is contained in a regulus. The proofs of these statements all follow from geometric incidence bounds -- such as the Guth-Katz bound on point-line incidences in R^3 -- combined with Tur\'an-type results on independent sets in sparse graphs and hypergraphs. Although similar Ramsey-type statements can be proved using existing generic algebraic frameworks, the lower bounds we get are much larger than what can be obtained with these methods. The proofs directly yield polynomial-time algorithms for finding subsets of the claimed size.Comment: 18 pages including appendi

    Erdos-Szekeres-type statements: Ramsey function and decidability in dimension 1

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    A classical and widely used lemma of Erdos and Szekeres asserts that for every n there exists N such that every N-term sequence a of real numbers contains an n-term increasing subsequence or an n-term nondecreasing subsequence; quantitatively, the smallest N with this property equals (n-1)^2+1. In the setting of the present paper, we express this lemma by saying that the set of predicates Phi={x_1<x_2,x_1\ge x_2}$ is Erdos-Szekeres with Ramsey function ES_Phi(n)=(n-1)^2+1. In general, we consider an arbitrary finite set Phi={Phi_1,...,Phi_m} of semialgebraic predicates, meaning that each Phi_j=Phi_j(x_1,...,x_k) is a Boolean combination of polynomial equations and inequalities in some number k of real variables. We define Phi to be Erdos-Szekeres if for every n there exists N such that each N-term sequence a of real numbers has an n-term subsequence b such that at least one of the Phi_j holds everywhere on b, which means that Phi_j(b_{i_1},...,b_{i_k}) holds for every choice of indices i_1,i_2,...,i_k, 1<=i_1<i_2<... <i_k<= n. We write ES_Phi(n) for the smallest N with the above property. We prove two main results. First, the Ramsey functions in this setting are at most doubly exponential (and sometimes they are indeed doubly exponential): for every Phi that is Erd\H{o}s--Szekeres, there is a constant C such that ES_Phi(n) < exp(exp(Cn)). Second, there is an algorithm that, given Phi, decides whether it is Erdos-Szekeres; thus, one-dimensional Erdos-Szekeres-style theorems can in principle be proved automatically.Comment: minor fixes of the previous version. to appear in Duke Math.

    Semi-algebraic Ramsey numbers

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    Given a finite point set P⊂RdP \subset \mathbb{R}^d, a kk-ary semi-algebraic relation EE on PP is the set of kk-tuples of points in PP, which is determined by a finite number of polynomial equations and inequalities in kdkd real variables. The description complexity of such a relation is at most tt if the number of polynomials and their degrees are all bounded by tt. The Ramsey number Rkd,t(s,n)R^{d,t}_k(s,n) is the minimum NN such that any NN-element point set PP in Rd\mathbb{R}^d equipped with a kk-ary semi-algebraic relation EE, such that EE has complexity at most tt, contains ss members such that every kk-tuple induced by them is in EE, or nn members such that every kk-tuple induced by them is not in EE. We give a new upper bound for Rkd,t(s,n)R^{d,t}_k(s,n) for k≥3k\geq 3 and ss fixed. In particular, we show that for fixed integers d,t,sd,t,s, R3d,t(s,n)≤2no(1),R^{d,t}_3(s,n) \leq 2^{n^{o(1)}}, establishing a subexponential upper bound on R3d,t(s,n)R^{d,t}_3(s,n). This improves the previous bound of 2nC2^{n^C} due to Conlon, Fox, Pach, Sudakov, and Suk, where CC is a very large constant depending on d,t,d,t, and ss. As an application, we give new estimates for a recently studied Ramsey-type problem on hyperplane arrangements in Rd\mathbb{R}^d. We also study multi-color Ramsey numbers for triangles in our semi-algebraic setting, achieving some partial results

    Semi-algebraic colorings of complete graphs

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    We consider mm-colorings of the edges of a complete graph, where each color class is defined semi-algebraically with bounded complexity. The case m=2m = 2 was first studied by Alon et al., who applied this framework to obtain surprisingly strong Ramsey-type results for intersection graphs of geometric objects and for other graphs arising in computational geometry. Considering larger values of mm is relevant, e.g., to problems concerning the number of distinct distances determined by a point set. For p≥3p\ge 3 and m≥2m\ge 2, the classical Ramsey number R(p;m)R(p;m) is the smallest positive integer nn such that any mm-coloring of the edges of KnK_n, the complete graph on nn vertices, contains a monochromatic KpK_p. It is a longstanding open problem that goes back to Schur (1916) to decide whether R(p;m)=2O(m)R(p;m)=2^{O(m)}, for a fixed pp. We prove that this is true if each color class is defined semi-algebraically with bounded complexity. The order of magnitude of this bound is tight. Our proof is based on the Cutting Lemma of Chazelle {\em et al.}, and on a Szemer\'edi-type regularity lemma for multicolored semi-algebraic graphs, which is of independent interest. The same technique is used to address the semi-algebraic variant of a more general Ramsey-type problem of Erd\H{o}s and Shelah
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