69 research outputs found

    On the distribution of sums of residues

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    We generalize and solve the \roman{mod}\,q analogue of a problem of Littlewood and Offord, raised by Vaughan and Wooley, concerning the distribution of the 2n2^n sums of the form i=1nεiai\sum_{i=1}^n\varepsilon_ia_i, where each εi\varepsilon_i is 00 or 11. For all qq, nn, kk we determine the maximum, over all reduced residues aia_i and all sets PP consisting of kk arbitrary residues, of the number of these sums that belong to PP.Comment: 5 page

    Poset-free Families and Lubell-boundedness

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    Given a finite poset PP, we consider the largest size \lanp of a family \F of subsets of [n]:={1,...,n}[n]:=\{1,...,n\} that contains no subposet PP. This continues the study of the asymptotic growth of \lanp; it has been conjectured that for all PP, \pi(P):= \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} \lanp/\nchn exists and equals a certain integer, e(P)e(P). While this is known to be true for paths, and several more general families of posets, for the simple diamond poset \D_2, the existence of π\pi frustratingly remains open. Here we develop theory to show that π(P)\pi(P) exists and equals the conjectured value e(P)e(P) for many new posets PP. We introduce a hierarchy of properties for posets, each of which implies π=e\pi=e, and some implying more precise information about \lanp. The properties relate to the Lubell function of a family \F of subsets, which is the average number of times a random full chain meets \F. We present an array of examples and constructions that possess the properties

    Extremal Values of the Interval Number of a Graph

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    The interval number i(G)i( G ) of a simple graph GG is the smallest number tt such that to each vertex in GG there can be assigned a collection of at most tt finite closed intervals on the real line so that there is an edge between vertices vv and ww in GG if and only if some interval for vv intersects some interval for ww. The well known interval graphs are precisely those graphs GG with i(G)1i ( G )\leqq 1. We prove here that for any graph GG with maximum degree d,i(G)12(d+1)d, i ( G )\leqq \lceil \frac{1}{2} ( d + 1 ) \rceil . This bound is attained by every regular graph of degree dd with no triangles, so is best possible. The degree bound is applied to show that i(G)13ni ( G )\leqq \lceil \frac{1}{3}n \rceil for graphs on nn vertices and i(G)ei ( G )\leqq \lfloor \sqrt{e} \rfloor for graphs with ee edges

    Spanning trees in graphs of minimum degree 4 or 5

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    AbstractFor a connected simple graph G let L(G) denote the maximum number of leaves in any spanning tree of G. Linial conjectured that if G has N vertices and minimum degree k, then L(G)⩾((k − 2)⧸(k + 1))N + ck where ck depends on k. We prove that if k = 4, L(G) 25N + 85; if k = 5, L(G) ⩾ 12N + 2. We give examples showing that these bounds are sharp

    No four subsets forming an N

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    AbstractWe survey results concerning the maximum size of a family F of subsets of an n-element set such that a certain configuration is avoided. When F avoids a chain of size two, this is just Sperner's theorem. Here we give bounds on how large F can be such that no four distinct sets A,B,C,D∈F satisfy A⊂B, C⊂B, C⊂D. In this case, the maximum size satisfies (n⌊n2⌋)(1+1n+Ω(1n2))⩽|F|⩽(n⌊n2⌋)(1+2n+O(1n2)), which is very similar to the best-known bounds for the more restrictive problem of F avoiding three sets B,C,D such that C⊂B, C⊂D

    Diamond-free Families

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    Given a finite poset P, we consider the largest size La(n,P) of a family of subsets of [n]:={1,...,n}[n]:=\{1,...,n\} that contains no subposet P. This problem has been studied intensively in recent years, and it is conjectured that π(P):=limnLa(n,P)/nchoosen/2\pi(P):= \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty} La(n,P)/{n choose n/2} exists for general posets P, and, moreover, it is an integer. For k2k\ge2 let \D_k denote the kk-diamond poset {A<B1,...,Bk<C}\{A< B_1,...,B_k < C\}. We study the average number of times a random full chain meets a PP-free family, called the Lubell function, and use it for P=\D_k to determine \pi(\D_k) for infinitely many values kk. A stubborn open problem is to show that \pi(\D_2)=2; here we make progress by proving \pi(\D_2)\le 2 3/11 (if it exists).Comment: 16 page

    Labeling Graphs with a Condition at Distance 2

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    Given a simple graph G (V, E) and a positive number d, an Ld(2, 1)-labelling of G is a function f V(G) [0, oc) such that whenever x, y E V are adjacent, If(x)- f(Y)l&gt;- 2d, and whenever the distance between x and y is two, If(x) f(Y)l&gt;- d. The Ld(2, 1)-labelling number A(G, d) is the smallest number m such that G has an Ld(2, 1)-labelling f with max{f(v) v E V} m. It is shown that to determine A(G, d), it suffices to study the case when d 1 and the labelling is nonnegative integral-valued. Let A(G) A(G, 1). The labelling numbers of special classes of graphs, e.g., A(C) 4 for any cycle C, are described. It is shown that for graphs of maximum degree A, A(G)
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