11,882 research outputs found
On Some Three-Color Ramsey Numbers for Paths
For graphs , the three-color Ramsey number is the smallest integer such that if we arbitrarily color the edges
of the complete graph of order with 3 colors, then it contains a
monochromatic copy of in color , for some .
First, we prove that the conjectured equality ,
if true, implies that for all .
We also obtain two new exact values and
, furthermore we do so without help of computer algorithms.
Our results agree with a formula which was
proved for sufficiently large by Gy\'arf\'as, Ruszink\'o, S\'ark\"ozy, and
Szemer\'{e}di in 2007. This provides more evidence for the conjecture that the
latter holds for all .Comment: 19 page
Ramsey numbers of ordered graphs
An ordered graph is a pair where is a graph and
is a total ordering of its vertices. The ordered Ramsey number
is the minimum number such that every ordered
complete graph with vertices and with edges colored by two colors contains
a monochromatic copy of .
In contrast with the case of unordered graphs, we show that there are
arbitrarily large ordered matchings on vertices for which
is superpolynomial in . 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 is
polynomial in the number of vertices of if the bandwidth of
is constant or if 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
Improved bounds on the multicolor Ramsey numbers of paths and even cycles
We study the multicolor Ramsey numbers for paths and even cycles,
and , which are the smallest integers such that every coloring of
the complete graph has a monochromatic copy of or
respectively. For a long time, has only been known to lie between
and . A recent breakthrough by S\'ark\"ozy and later
improvement by Davies, Jenssen and Roberts give an upper bound of . We improve the upper bound to . Our approach uses structural insights in connected graphs without a
large matching. These insights may be of independent interest
Monochromatic loose paths in multicolored -uniform cliques
For integers and , a -uniform hypergraph is called a
loose path of length , and denoted by , if it consists of
edges such that if and
if . In other words, each pair of
consecutive edges intersects on a single vertex, while all other pairs are
disjoint. Let be the minimum integer such that every
-edge-coloring of the complete -uniform hypergraph yields a
monochromatic copy of . In this paper we are mostly interested in
constructive upper bounds on , meaning that on the cost of
possibly enlarging the order of the complete hypergraph, we would like to
efficiently find a monochromatic copy of in every coloring. In
particular, we show that there is a constant such that for all ,
, , and , there is an
algorithm such that for every -edge-coloring of the edges of , it
finds a monochromatic copy of in time at most . We also
prove a non-constructive upper bound
Constrained Ramsey Numbers
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
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