9 research outputs found

    Polychromatic colorings of certain subgraphs of complete graphs and maximum densities of substructures of a hypercube

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    If G is a graph and H is a set of subgraphs of G, an edge-coloring of G is H-polychromatic if every graph from H gets all colors present in G on its edges. The H-polychromatic number of G, polyHG, is the largest number of colors in an H-polychromatic coloring. We determine polyHG exactly when G is a complete graph on n vertices, q a fixed nonnegative integer, and H is the family of one of: all matchings spanning n-q vertices, all 2-regular graphs spanning at least n-q vertices, or all cycles of length precisely n-q. For H, K, subsets of the vertex set V(Qd) of the d-cube Qd, K is an exact copy of H if there is an automorphism of Qd sending H to K. For a positive integer, d, and a configuration in Qd, H, we define λ(H,d) as the limit as n goes to infinity of the maximum fraction, over all subsets S of V(Qn), of sub-d-cubes of Qn whose intersection with S is an exact copy of H. We determine λ(C8,4) and λ(P4,3) where C8 is a “perfect” 8-cycle in Q4 and P4 is a “perfect” path with 4 vertices in Q3, λ(H,d) for several configurations in Q2, Q3, and Q4, and an infinite family of configurations. Strong connections exist with extensions Ramsey numbers for cycles in a graph, counting sequences with certain properties, inducibility of graphs, and we determine the inducibility of two vertex disjoint edges in the family of bipartite graphs

    EUROCOMB 21 Book of extended abstracts

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    Collection of abstracts of the 24th European Workshop on Computational Geometry

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    International audienceThe 24th European Workshop on Computational Geomety (EuroCG'08) was held at INRIA Nancy - Grand Est & LORIA on March 18-20, 2008. The present collection of abstracts contains the 63 scientific contributions as well as three invited talks presented at the workshop

    Connections Between Extremal Combinatorics, Probabilistic Methods, Ricci Curvature of Graphs, and Linear Algebra

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    This thesis studies some problems in extremal and probabilistic combinatorics, Ricci curvature of graphs, spectral hypergraph theory and the interplay between these areas. The first main focus of this thesis is to investigate several Ramsey-type problems on graphs, hypergraphs and sequences using probabilistic, combinatorial, algorithmic and spectral techniques: The size-Ramsey number Rˆ(G, r) is defined as the minimum number of edges in a hypergraph H such that every r-edge-coloring of H contains a monochromatic copy of G in H. We improved a result of Dudek, La Fleur, Mubayi and Rödl [ J. Graph Theory 2017 ] on the size-Ramsey number of tight paths and extended it to more colors. An edge-colored graph G is called rainbow if every edge of G receives a different color. The anti-Ramsey number of t edge-disjoint rainbow spanning trees, denoted by r(n, t), is defined as the maximum number of colors in an edge-coloring of Kn containing no t edge-disjoint rainbow spanning trees. Confirming a conjecture of Jahanbekam and West [J. Graph Theory 2016], we determine the anti-Ramsey number of t edge-disjoint rainbow spanning trees for all values of n and t. We study the extremal problems on Berge hypergraphs. Given a graph G = (V, E), a hypergraph H is called a Berge-G, denoted by BG, if there exists an injection i ∶ V (G) → V (H) and a bijection f ∶ E(G) → E(H) such that for every e = uv ∈ E(G), (i(u), i(v)) ⊆ f(e). We investigate the hypergraph Ramsey number of Berge cliques, the cover-Ramsey number of Berge hypergraphs, the cover-TurĂĄn desity of Berge hypergraphs as well as Hamiltonian Berge cycles in 3-uniform hypergraphs. The second part of the thesis uses the ‘geometry’ of graphs to derive concentration inequalities in probabilities spaces. We prove an Azuma-Hoeffding-type inequality in several classical models of random configurations, including the ErdƑs-RĂ©nyi random graph models G(n, p) and G(n,M), the random d-out(in)-regular directed graphs, and the space of random permutations. The main idea is using Ollivier’s work on the Ricci curvature of Markov chairs on metric spaces. We give a cleaner form of such concentration inequality in graphs. Namely, we show that for any Lipschitz function f on any graph (equipped with an ergodic random walk and thus an invariant distribution Îœ) with Ricci curvature at least Îș \u3e 0, we have Îœ (∣f − EÎœf∣ ≄ t) ≀ 2 exp (-t 2Îș/7). The third part of this thesis studies a problem in spectral hypergraph theory, which is the interplay between graph theory and linear algebra. In particular, we study the maximum spectral radius of outerplanar 3-uniform hypergraphs. Given a hypergraph H, the shadow of H is a graph G with V (G) = V (H) and E(G) = {uv ∶ uv ∈ h for some h ∈ E(H)}. A 3-uniform hypergraph H is called outerplanar if its shadow is outerplanar and all faces except the outer face are triangles, and the edge set of H is the set of triangle faces of its shadow. We show that the outerplanar 3-uniform hypergraph on n vertices of maximum spectral radius is the unique hypergraph with shadow K1 + Pn−1

    Polychromatic colorings of complete graphs with respect to 1‐, 2‐factors and Hamiltonian cycles

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    If G is a graph and math formula is a set of subgraphs of G, then an edge-coloring of G is called H-polychromatic if every graph from math formula gets all colors present in G. The H-polychromatic number of G, denoted poly_H(G), is the largest number of colors such that G has an H-polychromatic coloring. In this article, poly_H(G) is determined exactly when G is a complete graph and H is the family of all 1-factors. In addition poly_H(G) is found up to an additive constant term when G is a complete graph and H is the family of all 2-factors, or the family of all Hamiltonian cycles

    Polychromatic colorings of complete graphs with respect to 1‐, 2‐factors and Hamiltonian cycles

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    If G is a graph and H is a set of subgraphs of G, then an edge-coloring of G is called H-polychromatic if every graph from H gets all colors present in G on its edges. The H-polychromatic number of G, denoted polyH(G), is the largest number of colors in an H-polychromatic coloring. In this paper, polyH(G) is determined exactly when G is a complete graph and H is the family of all 1-factors. In addition polyH(G) is found up to an additive constant term when G is a complete graph and H is the family of all 2-factors, or the family of all Hamiltonian cycles.This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Axenovich M, Goldwasser J, Hansen R, LidickĂœ B, Martin RR, OïŹ€ner D, Talbot J, Young M. Polychromatic colorings of complete graphs with respect to 1-, 2-factors and Hamiltonian cycles. J Graph Theory. 2018;87:660–671, which has been published in final form at doi: 10.1002/jgt.22180. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions.</p
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