101 research outputs found

    Nonrepetitive colorings of lexicographic product of graphs

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    A coloring cc of the vertices of a graph GG is nonrepetitive if there exists no path v1v2v2lv_1v_2\ldots v_{2l} for which c(vi)=c(vl+i)c(v_i)=c(v_{l+i}) for all 1il1\le i\le l. Given graphs GG and HH with V(H)=k|V(H)|=k, the lexicographic product G[H]G[H] is the graph obtained by substituting every vertex of GG by a copy of HH, and every edge of GG by a copy of Kk,kK_{k,k}. %Our main results are the following. We prove that for a sufficiently long path PP, a nonrepetitive coloring of P[Kk]P[K_k] needs at least 3k+k/23k+\lfloor k/2\rfloor colors. If k>2k>2 then we need exactly 2k+12k+1 colors to nonrepetitively color P[Ek]P[E_k], where EkE_k is the empty graph on kk vertices. If we further require that every copy of EkE_k be rainbow-colored and the path PP is sufficiently long, then the smallest number of colors needed for P[Ek]P[E_k] is at least 3k+13k+1 and at most 3k+k/23k+\lceil k/2\rceil. Finally, we define fractional nonrepetitive colorings of graphs and consider the connections between this notion and the above results

    On the number of maximal intersecting k-uniform families and further applications of Tuza's set pair method

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    We study the function M(n,k)M(n,k) which denotes the number of maximal kk-uniform intersecting families F([n]k)F\subseteq \binom{[n]}{k}. Improving a bound of Balogh at al. on M(n,k)M(n,k), we determine the order of magnitude of logM(n,k)\log M(n,k) by proving that for any fixed kk, M(n,k)=nΘ((2kk))M(n,k) =n^{\Theta(\binom{2k}{k})} holds. Our proof is based on Tuza's set pair approach. The main idea is to bound the size of the largest possible point set of a cross-intersecting system. We also introduce and investigate some related functions and parameters.Comment: 11 page

    Forbidden subposet problems for traces of set families

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    In this paper we introduce a problem that bridges forbidden subposet and forbidden subconfiguration problems. The sets F1,F2,,FPF_1,F_2, \dots,F_{|P|} form a copy of a poset PP, if there exists a bijection i:P{F1,F2,,FP}i:P\rightarrow \{F_1,F_2, \dots,F_{|P|}\} such that for any p,pPp,p'\in P the relation p<Ppp<_P p' implies i(p)i(p)i(p)\subsetneq i(p'). A family F\mathcal{F} of sets is \textit{PP-free} if it does not contain any copy of PP. The trace of a family F\mathcal{F} on a set XX is FX:={FX:FF}\mathcal{F}|_X:=\{F\cap X: F\in \mathcal{F}\}. We introduce the following notions: F2[n]\mathcal{F}\subseteq 2^{[n]} is ll-trace PP-free if for any ll-subset L[n]L\subseteq [n], the family FL\mathcal{F}|_L is PP-free and F\mathcal{F} is trace PP-free if it is ll-trace PP-free for all lnl\le n. As the first instances of these problems we determine the maximum size of trace BB-free families, where BB is the butterfly poset on four elements a,b,c,da,b,c,d with a,b<c,da,b<c,d and determine the asymptotics of the maximum size of (ni)(n-i)-trace Kr,sK_{r,s}-free families for i=1,2i=1,2. We also propose a generalization of the main conjecture of the area of forbidden subposet problems

    Search Problems in Vector Spaces

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    We consider the following qq-analog of the basic combinatorial search problem: let qq be a prime power and \GF(q) the finite field of qq elements. Let VV denote an nn-dimensional vector space over \GF(q) and let v\mathbf{v} be an unknown 1-dimensional subspace of VV. We will be interested in determining the minimum number of queries that is needed to find v\mathbf{v} provided all queries are subspaces of VV and the answer to a query UU is YES if vU\mathbf{v} \leqslant U and NO if v⩽̸U\mathbf{v} \not\leqslant U. This number will be denoted by A(n,q)A(n,q) in the adaptive case (when for each queries answers are obtained immediately and later queries might depend on previous answers) and M(n,q)M(n,q) in the non-adaptive case (when all queries must be made in advance). In the case n=3n=3 we prove 2q1=A(3,q)<M(3,q)2q-1=A(3,q)<M(3,q) if qq is large enough. While for general values of nn and qq we establish the bounds nlogqA(n,q)(1+o(1))nq n\log q \le A(n,q) \le (1+o(1))nq and (1o(1))nqM(n,q)2nq, (1-o(1))nq \le M(n,q) \le 2nq, provided qq tends to infinity

    On some extremal and probabilistic questions for tree posets

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    Given two posets P,QP,Q we say that QQ is PP-free if QQ does not contain a copy of PP. The size of the largest PP-free family in 2[n]2^{[n]}, denoted by La(n,P)La(n,P), has been extensively studied since the 1980s. We consider several related problems. Indeed, for posets PP whose Hasse diagrams are trees and have radius at most 22, we prove that there are 2(1+o(1))La(n,P)2^{(1+o(1))La(n,P)} PP-free families in 2[n]2^{[n]}, thereby confirming a conjecture of Gerbner, Nagy, Patk\'os and Vizer [Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, 2021] in these cases. For such PP we also resolve the random version of the PP-free problem, thus generalising the random version of Sperner's theorem due to Balogh, Mycroft and Treglown [Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A, 2014], and Collares Neto and Morris [Random Structures and Algorithms, 2016]. Additionally, we make a general conjecture that, roughly speaking, asserts that subfamilies of 2[n]2^{[n]} of size sufficiently above La(n,P)La(n,P) robustly contain PP, for any poset PP whose Hasse diagram is a tree

    Shadows and intersections in vector spaces

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    AbstractWe prove a vector space analog of a version of the Kruskal–Katona theorem due to Lovász. We apply this result to extend Frankl's theorem on r-wise intersecting families to vector spaces. In particular, we obtain a short new proof of the Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem for vector spaces
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