The Ramsey number R(G1,G2,G3) is the smallest positive integer n
such that for all 3-colorings of the edges of Kn there is a monochromatic
G1 in the first color, G2 in the second color, or G3 in the third
color. We study the bounds on various 3-color Ramsey numbers R(G1,G2,G3), where Gi∈{K3,K3+e,K4−e,K4}. The minimal and maximal
combinations of Gi's correspond to the classical Ramsey numbers R3(K3)
and R3(K4), respectively, where R3(G)=R(G,G,G). Here, we focus on
the much less studied combinations between these two cases.
Through computational and theoretical means we establish that R(K3,K3,K4−e)=17, and by construction we raise the lower bounds on R(K3,K4−e,K4−e) and R(K4,K4−e,K4−e). For some G and H it was known that
R(K3,G,H)=R(K3+e,G,H); we prove this is true for several more cases
including R(K3,K3,K4−e)=R(K3+e,K3+e,K4−e).
Ramsey numbers generalize to more colors, such as in the famous 4-color case
of R4(K3), where monochromatic triangles are avoided. It is known that 51≤R4(K3)≤62. We prove a surprising theorem stating that if
R4(K3)=51 then R4(K3+e)=52, otherwise R4(K3+e)=R4(K3).Comment: 12 page