119 research outputs found

    Some intersection theorems on two-valued functions

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    On the size-Ramsey number of cycles

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    For given graphs G1,,GkG_1,\ldots,G_k, the size-Ramsey number R^(G1,,Gk)\hat{R}(G_1,\ldots,G_k) is the smallest integer mm for which there exists a graph HH on mm edges such that in every kk-edge coloring of HH with colors 1,,k1,\ldots,k, H H contains a monochromatic copy of GiG_i of color ii for some 1ik1\leq i\leq k. We denote R^(G1,,Gk)\hat{R}(G_1,\ldots,G_k) by R^k(G)\hat{R}_{k}(G) when G1==Gk=GG_1=\cdots=G_k=G. Haxell, Kohayakawa and \L{}uczak showed that the size-Ramsey number of a cycle CnC_n is linear in nn i.e. R^k(Cn)ckn\hat{R}_{k}(C_{n})\leq c_k n for some constant ckc_k. Their proof, however, is based on the regularity lemma of Szemer\'{e}di and so no specific constant ckc_k is known. In this paper, we give various upper bounds for the size-Ramsey numbers of cycles. We provide an alternative proof of R^k(Cn)ckn\hat{R}_{k}(C_{n})\leq c_k n, avoiding the use of the regularity lemma, where ck c_k is exponential and doubly-exponential in k k , when n n is even and odd, respectively. In particular, we show that for sufficiently large nn we have R^(Cn,Cn)105×cn,\hat{R}(C_{n},C_{n}) \leq 10^5\times cn, where c=6.5c=6.5 if nn is even and c=1989c=1989 otherwise

    Induced Matchings in Subcubic Planar Graphs

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    A note on anti-coordination and social interactions

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    This note confirms a conjecture of [Bramoull\'{e}, Anti-coordination and social interactions, Games and Economic Behavior, 58, 2007: 30-49]. The problem, which we name the maximum independent cut problem, is a restricted version of the MAX-CUT problem, requiring one side of the cut to be an independent set. We show that the maximum independent cut problem does not admit any polynomial time algorithm with approximation ratio better than n1ϵn^{1-\epsilon}, where nn is the number of nodes, and ϵ\epsilon arbitrarily small, unless P=NP. For the rather special case where each node has a degree of at most four, the problem is still MAXSNP-hard.Comment: 7 page

    On a problem of Erd\H{o}s and Rothschild on edges in triangles

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    Erd\H{o}s and Rothschild asked to estimate the maximum number, denoted by H(N,C), such that every N-vertex graph with at least CN^2 edges, each of which is contained in at least one triangle, must contain an edge that is in at least H(N,C) triangles. In particular, Erd\H{o}s asked in 1987 to determine whether for every C>0 there is \epsilon >0 such that H(N,C) > N^\epsilon, for all sufficiently large N. We prove that H(N,C) = N^{O(1/log log N)} for every fixed C < 1/4. This gives a negative answer to the question of Erd\H{o}s, and is best possible in terms of the range for C, as it is known that every N-vertex graph with more than (N^2)/4 edges contains an edge that is in at least N/6 triangles.Comment: 8 page

    Linear-time Algorithms for Eliminating Claws in Graphs

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    Since many NP-complete graph problems have been shown polynomial-time solvable when restricted to claw-free graphs, we study the problem of determining the distance of a given graph to a claw-free graph, considering vertex elimination as measure. CLAW-FREE VERTEX DELETION (CFVD) consists of determining the minimum number of vertices to be removed from a graph such that the resulting graph is claw-free. Although CFVD is NP-complete in general and recognizing claw-free graphs is still a challenge, where the current best algorithm for a graph GG has the same running time of the best algorithm for matrix multiplication, we present linear-time algorithms for CFVD on weighted block graphs and weighted graphs with bounded treewidth. Furthermore, we show that this problem can be solved in linear time by a simpler algorithm on forests, and we determine the exact values for full kk-ary trees. On the other hand, we show that CLAW-FREE VERTEX DELETION is NP-complete even when the input graph is a split graph. We also show that the problem is hard to approximate within any constant factor better than 22, assuming the Unique Games Conjecture.Comment: 20 page

    The history of degenerate (bipartite) extremal graph problems

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    This paper is a survey on Extremal Graph Theory, primarily focusing on the case when one of the excluded graphs is bipartite. On one hand we give an introduction to this field and also describe many important results, methods, problems, and constructions.Comment: 97 pages, 11 figures, many problems. This is the preliminary version of our survey presented in Erdos 100. In this version 2 only a citation was complete
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