2,351 research outputs found
Local colourings and monochromatic partitions in complete bipartite graphs
We show that for any -local colouring of the edges of the balanced
complete bipartite graph , its vertices can be covered with at
most~ disjoint monochromatic paths. And, we can cover almost all vertices of
any complete or balanced complete bipartite -locally coloured graph with
disjoint monochromatic cycles.\\ We also determine the -local
bipartite Ramsey number of a path almost exactly: Every -local colouring of
the edges of contains a monochromatic path on vertices.Comment: 18 page
Bipartite, Size, and Online Ramsey Numbers of Some Cycles and Paths
The basic premise of Ramsey Theory states that in a sufficiently large system, complete disorder is impossible. One instance from the world of graph theory says that given two fixed graphs F and H, there exists a finitely large graph G such that any red/blue edge coloring of the edges of G will produce a red copy of F or a blue copy of H. Much research has been conducted in recent decades on quantifying exactly how large G must be if we consider different classes of graphs for F and H. In this thesis, we explore several Ramsey- type problems with a particular focus on paths and cycles. We first examine the bipartite size Ramsey number of a path on n vertices, bËr(Pn), and give an upper bound using a random graph construction motivated by prior upper bound improvements in similar problems. Next, we consider the size Ramsey number RË (C, Pn) and provide a significant improvement to the upper bound using a very structured graph, the cube of a path, as opposed to a random construction. We also prove a small improvement to the lower bound and show that the r-colored version of this problem is asymptotically linear in rn. Lastly, we give an upper bound for the online Ramsey number RË (C, Pn)
Finding combinatorial structures
In this thesis we answer questions in two related areas of combinatorics:
Ramsey theory and asymptotic enumeration.
In Ramsey theory we introduce a new method for finding desired structures.
We find a new upper bound on the Ramsey number of a path against a kth
power of a path.
Using our new method and this result we obtain a new upper bound on the
Ramsey number of the kth power of a long cycle.
As a corollary we show that, while graphs on n vertices with maximum
degree k may in general have Ramsey numbers as large as ckn, if the stronger
restriction that the bandwidth should be at most k is given, then the Ramsey
numbers are bounded by the much smaller value.
We go on to attack an old conjecture of Lehel: by using our new method
we can improve on a result of Luczak, Rodl and Szemeredi [60]. Our new
method replaces their use of the Regularity Lemma, and allows us to prove
that for any n > 218000, whenever the edges of the complete graph on n
vertices are two-coloured there exist disjoint monochromatic cycles covering
all n vertices.
In asymptotic enumeration we examine first the class of bipartite graphs
with some forbidden induced subgraph H. We obtain some results for every
H, with special focus on the cases where the growth speed of the class is
factorial, and make some comments on a connection to clique-width. We
then move on to a detailed discussion of 2-SAT functions. We find the correct
asymptotic formula for the number of 2-SAT functions
on n variables (an improvement on a result of BollobÂŽas, Brightwell and
Leader [13], who found the dominant term in the exponent), the first error
term for this formula, and some bounds on smaller error terms. Finally
we obtain various expected values in the uniform model of random 2-SAT
functions
On globally sparse Ramsey graphs
We say that a graph has the Ramsey property w.r.t.\ some graph and
some integer , or is -Ramsey for short, if any -coloring
of the edges of contains a monochromatic copy of . R{\"o}dl and
Ruci{\'n}ski asked how globally sparse -Ramsey graphs can possibly
be, where the density of is measured by the subgraph with
the highest average degree. So far, this so-called Ramsey density is known only
for cliques and some trivial graphs . In this work we determine the Ramsey
density up to some small error terms for several cases when is a complete
bipartite graph, a cycle or a path, and colors are available
Cycles are strongly Ramsey-unsaturated
We call a graph H Ramsey-unsaturated if there is an edge in the complement of
H such that the Ramsey number r(H) of H does not change upon adding it to H.
This notion was introduced by Balister, Lehel and Schelp who also proved that
cycles (except for ) are Ramsey-unsaturated, and conjectured that,
moreover, one may add any chord without changing the Ramsey number of the cycle
, unless n is even and adding the chord creates an odd cycle.
We prove this conjecture for large cycles by showing a stronger statement: If
a graph H is obtained by adding a linear number of chords to a cycle ,
then , as long as the maximum degree of H is bounded, H is either
bipartite (for even n) or almost bipartite (for odd n), and n is large.
This motivates us to call cycles strongly Ramsey-unsaturated. Our proof uses
the regularity method
Vertex covers by monochromatic pieces - A survey of results and problems
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
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