45 research outputs found

    Finite reflection groups and graph norms

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    Given a graph HH on vertex set {1,2,,n}\{1,2,\cdots, n\} and a function f:[0,1]2Rf:[0,1]^2 \rightarrow \mathbb{R}, define \begin{align*} \|f\|_{H}:=\left\vert\int \prod_{ij\in E(H)}f(x_i,x_j)d\mu^{|V(H)|}\right\vert^{1/|E(H)|}, \end{align*} where μ\mu is the Lebesgue measure on [0,1][0,1]. We say that HH is norming if H\|\cdot\|_H is a semi-norm. A similar notion r(H)\|\cdot\|_{r(H)} is defined by fr(H):=fH\|f\|_{r(H)}:=\||f|\|_{H} and HH is said to be weakly norming if r(H)\|\cdot\|_{r(H)} is a norm. Classical results show that weakly norming graphs are necessarily bipartite. In the other direction, Hatami showed that even cycles, complete bipartite graphs, and hypercubes are all weakly norming. We demonstrate that any graph whose edges percolate in an appropriate way under the action of a certain natural family of automorphisms is weakly norming. This result includes all previously known examples of weakly norming graphs, but also allows us to identify a much broader class arising from finite reflection groups. We include several applications of our results. In particular, we define and compare a number of generalisations of Gowers' octahedral norms and we prove some new instances of Sidorenko's conjecture.Comment: 29 page

    Two Approaches to Sidorenko's Conjecture

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    Sidorenko's conjecture states that for every bipartite graph HH on {1,,k}\{1,\cdots,k\}, (i,j)E(H)h(xi,yj)dμV(H)(h(x,y)dμ2)E(H)\int \prod_{(i,j)\in E(H)} h(x_i, y_j) d\mu^{|V(H)|} \ge \left( \int h(x,y) \,d\mu^2 \right)^{|E(H)|} holds, where μ\mu is the Lebesgue measure on [0,1][0,1] and hh is a bounded, non-negative, symmetric, measurable function on [0,1]2[0,1]^2. An equivalent discrete form of the conjecture is that the number of homomorphisms from a bipartite graph HH to a graph GG is asymptotically at least the expected number of homomorphisms from HH to the Erd\H{o}s-R\'{e}nyi random graph with the same expected edge density as GG. In this paper, we present two approaches to the conjecture. First, we introduce the notion of tree-arrangeability, where a bipartite graph HH with bipartition ABA \cup B is tree-arrangeable if neighborhoods of vertices in AA have a certain tree-like structure. We show that Sidorenko's conjecture holds for all tree-arrangeable bipartite graphs. In particular, this implies that Sidorenko's conjecture holds if there are two vertices a1,a2a_1, a_2 in AA such that each vertex aAa \in A satisfies N(a)N(a1)N(a) \subseteq N(a_1) or N(a)N(a2)N(a) \subseteq N(a_2), and also implies a recent result of Conlon, Fox, and Sudakov \cite{CoFoSu}. Second, if TT is a tree and HH is a bipartite graph satisfying Sidorenko's conjecture, then it is shown that the Cartesian product THT \Box H of TT and HH also satisfies Sidorenko's conjecture. This result implies that, for all d2d \ge 2, the dd-dimensional grid with arbitrary side lengths satisfies Sidorenko's conjecture.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figure

    Sidorenko's conjecture for higher tree decompositions

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    This is a companion note to our paper 'Some advances on Sidorenko's conjecture', elaborating on a remark in that paper that the approach which proves Sidorenko's conjecture for strongly tree-decomposable graphs may be extended to a broader class, comparable to that given in work of Szegedy, through further iteration.Comment: 7 pages, unpublished not

    Rebalancing Growth in the Republic of Korea

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    The current account surplus of the Republic of Korea (henceforth Korea) increased significantly in the immediate recovery period after the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis. Since then the surplus has gradually diminished, and from 2006 to 2008, the current account was close to being balanced. Econometric analysis reveals that the effect of exchange rate changes on Korea's trade is not robust during non-crisis periods. Exchange rates only significantly affect trade when observations during crisis periods are included. This suggests that exchange rate adjustments alone will not solve the imbalance issue. Korea's external imbalances are not only caused by external factors; they also reflect internal and policy factors such as: (i) saving-investment imbalances; (ii) export-oriented policies; and (iii) the unbalanced structure of manufacturing and services. These internal imbalances result from domestic distortions and structural imbalances arising from market inefficiencies and public policies. These must be addressed to ensure balanced and sustained economic growth.korea economic growth; korea external imbalances; korea trade

    Sidorenko's conjecture for blow-ups

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    A celebrated conjecture of Sidorenko and Erdős-Simonovits states that, for all bipartite graphs H, quasirandom graphs contain asymptotically the minimum number of copies of H taken over all graphs with the same order and edge density. This conjecture has attracted considerable interest over the last decade and is now known to hold for a broad range of bipartite graphs, with the overall trend saying that a graph satisfies the conjecture if it can be built from simple building blocks such as trees in a certain recursive fashion. Our contribution here, which goes beyond this paradigm, is to show that the conjecture holds for any bipartite graph H with bipartition A ∪ B where the number of vertices in B of degree k satisfies a certain divisibility condition for each k. As a corollary, we have that for every bipartite graph H with bipartition A ∪ B, there is a positive integer p such that the blow-up H_(A)^(p) formed by taking p vertex-disjoint copies of H and gluing all copies of A along corresponding vertices satisfies the conjecture. Another way of viewing this latter result is that for every bipartite H there is a positive integer p such that an L^(p)-version of Sidorenko's conjecture holds for H

    On graph norms for complex-valued functions

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    For any given graph HH, one may define a natural corresponding functional .H\|.\|_H for real-valued functions by using homomorphism density. One may also extend this to complex-valued functions, once HH is paired with a 22-edge-colouring α\alpha to assign conjugates. We say that HH is real-norming (resp. complex-norming) if .H\|.\|_H (resp. .H,α\|.\|_{H,\alpha} for some α\alpha) is a norm on the vector space of real-valued (resp. complex-valued) functions. These generalise the Gowers octahedral norms, a widely used tool in extremal combinatorics to quantify quasirandomness. We unify these two seemingly different notions of graph norms in real- and complex-valued settings. Namely, we prove that HH is complex-norming if and only if it is real-norming and simply call the property norming. Our proof does not explicitly construct a suitable 22-edge-colouring α\alpha but obtains its existence and uniqueness, which may be of independent interest. As an application, we give various example graphs that are not norming. In particular, we show that hypercubes are not norming, which resolves the last outstanding problem posed in Hatami's pioneering work on graph norms.Comment: 33 page

    Common graphs with arbitrary connectivity and chromatic number

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    A graph HH is common if the number of monochromatic copies of HH in a 2-edge-colouring of the complete graph KnK_n is asymptotically minimised by the random colouring. We prove that, given k,r>0k,r>0, there exists a kk-connected common graph with chromatic number at least rr. The result is built upon the recent breakthrough of Kr\'a\v{l}, Volec, and Wei who obtained common graphs with arbitrarily large chromatic number and answers a question of theirs.Comment: 6 page
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