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1.
On the Ramsey Number of Sparse 3-Graphs   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We consider a hypergraph generalization of a conjecture of Burr and Erd?s concerning the Ramsey number of graphs with bounded degree. It was shown by Chvátal, Rödl, Trotter, and Szemerédi [The Ramsey number of a graph with bounded maximum degree, J. Combin. Theory Ser. B 34 (1983), no. 3, 239–243] that the Ramsey number R(G) of a graph G of bounded maximum degree is linear in |V(G)|. We derive the analogous result for 3-uniform hypergraphs.  相似文献   

2.
Chvátal, Rödl, Szemerédi and Trotter [V. Chvátal, V. Rödl, E. Szemerédi and W.T. Trotter, The Ramsey number of a graph with a bounded maximum degree, J. Combinatorial Theory B 34 (1983), 239–243] proved that the Ramsey numbers of graphs of bounded maximum degree are linear in their order. In [O. Cooley, N. Fountoulakis, D. Kühn and D. Osthus, 3-uniform hypergraphs of bounded degree have linear Ramsey numbers, submitted] and [B. Nagle, S. Olsen, V. Rödl and M. Schacht, On the Ramsey number of sparse 3-graphs, preprint] the same result was proved for 3-uniform hypergraphs. In [O. Cooley, N. Fountoulakis, D. Kühn and D. Osthus, Embeddings and Ramsey numbers of sparse k-uniform hypergraphs, submitted] we extended this result to k-uniform hypergraphs for any integer k3. As in the 3-uniform case, the main new tool which we proved and used is an embedding lemma for k-uniform hypergraphs of bounded maximum degree into suitable k-uniform ‘quasi-random’ hypergraphs.  相似文献   

3.
The Ramsey number R(G1,G2) of two graphs G1 and G2 is the least integer p so that either a graph G of order p contains a copy of G1 or its complement Gc contains a copy of G2. In 1973, Burr and Erd?s offered a total of $25 for settling the conjecture that there is a constant c = c(d) so that R(G,G)≤ c|V(G)| for all d‐degenerate graphs G, i.e., the Ramsey numbers grow linearly for d‐degenerate graphs. We show in this paper that the Ramsey numbers grow linearly for degenerate graphs versus some sparser graphs, arrangeable graphs, and crowns for example. This implies that the Ramsey numbers grow linearly for degenerate graphs versus graphs with bounded maximum degree, planar graphs, or graphs without containing any topological minor of a fixed clique, etc. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Graph Theory  相似文献   

4.
We estimate Ramsey numbers for bipartite graphs with small bandwidth and bounded maximum degree. In particular we determine asymptotically the two and three color Ramsey numbers for grid graphs. More generally, we determine asymptotically the two color Ramsey number for bipartite graphs with small bandwidth and bounded maximum degree and the three color Ramsey number for such graphs with the additional assumption that the bipartite graph is balanced.  相似文献   

5.
Chvátal, Rödl, Szemerédi and Trotter [3] proved that the Ramsey numbers of graphs of bounded maximum degree are linear in their order. In [6,23] the same result was proved for 3-uniform hypergraphs. Here we extend this result to κ-uniform hypergraphs for any integer κ ≥ 3. As in the 3-uniform case, the main new tool which we prove and use is an embedding lemma for κ-uniform hypergraphs of bounded maximum degree into suitable κ-uniform ‘quasi-random’ hypergraphs.  相似文献   

6.
A complete coloring of a simple graph G is a proper vertex coloring such that each pair of colors appears together on at least one edge. The achromatic number ψ(G) is the greatest number of colors in such a coloring. We say a class of graphs is fragmentable if for any positive ε, there is a constant C such that any graph in the class can be broken into pieces of size at most C by removing a proportion at most ε of the vertices. Examples include planar graphs and grids of fixed dimension. Determining the achromatic number of a graph is NP‐complete in general, even for trees, and the achromatic number is known precisely for only very restricted classes of graphs. We extend these classes very considerably, by giving, for graphs in any class which is fragmentable, triangle‐free, and of bounded degree, a necessary and sufficient condition for a sufficiently large graph to have a complete coloring with a given number of colors. For the same classes, this gives a tight lower bound for the achromatic number of sufficiently large graphs, and shows that the achromatic number can be determined in polynomial time. As examples, we give exact values of the achromatic number for several graph families. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Graph Theory 65:94–114, 2010  相似文献   

7.
8.
It is well known that almost every graph in the random space G(n, p) has chromatic number of order O(np/log(np)), but it is not clear how we can recognize such graphs without eventually computing the chromatic numbers, which is NP‐hard. The first goal of this article is to show that the above‐mentioned upper bound on the chromatic number can be guaranteed by simple degree conditions, which are satisfied by G(n, p) almost surely for most values of p. It turns out that the same conditions imply a similar bound for the choice number of a graph. The proof implies a polynomial coloring algorithm for the case p is not too small. Our result has several applications. It can be used to determine the right order of magnitude of the choice number of random graphs and hypergraphs. It also leads to a general bound on the choice number of locally sparse graphs and to several interesting facts about finite fields. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Graph Theory 31: 201–226, 1999  相似文献   

9.
For two given graphs G and H the planar Ramsey number PR(G,H) is the smallest integer n such that every planar graph F on n vertices either contains a copy of G or its complement contains a copy H. By studying the existence of subhamiltonian cycles in complements of sparse graphs, we determine all planar Ramsey numbers for pairs of cycles.  相似文献   

10.
A recent result of Condon, Kim, Kühn, and Osthus implies that for any , an n‐vertex almost r‐regular graph G has an approximate decomposition into any collections of n‐vertex bounded degree trees. In this paper, we prove that a similar result holds for an almost αn‐regular graph G with any α>0 and a collection of bounded degree trees on at most (1?o(1))n vertices if G does not contain large bipartite holes. This result is sharp in the sense that it is necessary to exclude large bipartite holes and we cannot hope for an approximate decomposition into n‐vertex trees. Moreover, this implies that for any α>0 and an n‐vertex almost αn‐regular graph G, with high probability, the randomly perturbed graph has an approximate decomposition into all collections of bounded degree trees of size at most (1?o(1))n simultaneously. This is the first result considering an approximate decomposition problem in the context of Ramsey‐Turán theory and the randomly perturbed graph model.  相似文献   

11.
For a given graph F we consider the family of (finite) graphs G with the Ramsey property for F, that is the set of such graphs G with the property that every two‐coloring of the edges of G yields a monochromatic copy of F. For F being a triangle Friedgut, Rödl, Ruciński, and Tetali (2004) established the sharp threshold for the Ramsey property in random graphs. We present a simpler proof of this result which extends to a more general class of graphs F including all cycles. The proof is based on Friedgut's criteria (1999) for sharp thresholds and on the recently developed container method for independent sets in hypergraphs by Saxton and Thomason and by Balogh, Morris and Samotij. The proof builds on some recent work of Friedgut et al. who established a similar result for van der Waerden's theorem.  相似文献   

12.
We show that if G is a Ramsey size‐linear graph and x,yV (G) then if we add a sufficiently long path between x and y we obtain a new Ramsey size‐linear graph. As a consequence we show that if G is any graph such that every cycle in G contains at least four consecutive vertices of degree 2 then G is Ramsey size‐linear. © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Graph Theory 39: 1–5, 2002  相似文献   

13.
Given a graph H , a graph G is called a Ramsey graph of H if there is a monochromatic copy of H in every coloring of the edges of G with two colors. Two graphs G , H are called Ramsey equivalent if they have the same set of Ramsey graphs. Fox et al. (J Combin Theory Ser B 109 (2014), 120–133) asked whether there are two nonisomorphic connected graphs that are Ramsey equivalent. They proved that a clique is not Ramsey equivalent to any other connected graph. Results of Ne?et?il et al. showed that any two graphs with different clique number (Combinatorica 1(2) (1981), 199–202) or different odd girth (Comment Math Univ Carolin 20(3) (1979), 565–582) are not Ramsey equivalent. These are the only structural graph parameters we know that “distinguish” two graphs in the above sense. This article provides further supportive evidence for a negative answer to the question of Fox et al. by claiming that for wide classes of graphs, the chromatic number is a distinguishing parameter. In addition, it is shown here that all stars and paths and all connected graphs on at most five vertices are not Ramsey equivalent to any other connected graph. Moreover, two connected graphs are not Ramsey equivalent if they belong to a special class of trees or to classes of graphs with clique‐reduction properties.  相似文献   

14.
The Ramsey number r(H) of a graph H is the minimum positive integer N such that every two-coloring of the edges of the complete graph KN on N vertices contains a monochromatic copy of H. A graph H is d-degenerate if every subgraph of H has minimum degree at most d. Burr and Erdős in 1975 conjectured that for each positive integer d there is a constant cd such that r(H)≤cdn for every d-degenerate graph H on n vertices. We show that for such graphs , improving on an earlier bound of Kostochka and Sudakov. We also study Ramsey numbers of random graphs, showing that for d fixed, almost surely the random graph G(n,d/n) has Ramsey number linear in n. For random bipartite graphs, our proof gives nearly tight bounds.  相似文献   

15.
We show that the Ramsey number is linear for every uniform hypergraph with bounded degree. This is a hypergraph extension of the famous theorem for ordinary graphs which Chvátal et al. [V. Chvátal, V. Rödl, E. Szemerédi and W.T. Trotter, Jr., The Ramsey number of a graph with bounded maximum degree, J. Combin. Theory Ser. B 34 (1983), pp. 239–243] showed in 1983. Our proof demonstrates the potential of a new regularity lemma by [Y. Ishigami, A simple regularization of hypergraphs, preprint, arXiv:math/0612838 (2006)].  相似文献   

16.
For given graphs G and H and an integer k, the Gallai–Ramsey number is defined to be the minimum integer n such that, in any k coloring of the edges of Kn, there exists a subgraph isomorphic to either a rainbow coloring of G or a monochromatic coloring of H. In this work, we consider Gallai–Ramsey numbers for the case when G=K3 and H is a cycle of a fixed length.  相似文献   

17.
In this paper we present three Ramsey‐type results, which we derive from a simple and yet powerful lemma, proved using probabilistic arguments. Let 3 ≤ r < s be fixed integers and let G be a graph on n vertices not containing a complete graph Ks on s vertices. More than 40 years ago Erd?s and Rogers posed the problem of estimating the maximum size of a subset of G without a copy of the complete graph Kr. Our first result provides a new lower bound for this problem, which improves previous results of various researchers. It also allows us to solve some special cases of a closely related question posed by Erd?s. For two graphs G and H, the Ramsey number R(G, H) is the minimum integer N such that any red‐blue coloring of the edges of the complete graph KN, contains either a red copy of G or a blue copy of H. The book with n pages is the graph Bn consisting of n triangles sharing one edge. Here we study the book‐complete graph Ramsey numbers and show that R(Bn, Kn) ≤ O(n3/log3/2n), improving the bound of Li and Rousseau. Finally, motivated by a question of Erd?s, Hajnal, Simonovits, Sós, and Szemerédi, we obtain for all 0 < δ < 2/3 an estimate on the number of edges in a K4‐free graph of order n which has no independent set of size n1‐δ. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Random Struct. Alg., 2005  相似文献   

18.
A graph H is said to be light in a family H of graphs if each graph GH containing a subgraph isomorphic to H contains also an isomorphic copy of H such that each its vertex has the degree (in G) bounded above by a finite number φ(H,H) depending only on H and H. We prove that in the family of all 3-connected plane graphs of minimum degree 5 (or minimum face size 5, respectively), the paths with certain small graphs attached to one of its ends are light.  相似文献   

19.
The following is a conjecture of Ulam: In any partition of the integer lattice on the plane into uniformly bounded sets, there exists a set that is adjacent to at least six other sets. Two sets are adjacent if each contain a vertex of the same unit square. This problem is generalized as follows. Given any uniformly bounded partitionP of the vertex set of an infinite graphG with finite maximum degree, letP (G) denote the graph obtained by letting each set of the partition be a vertex ofP (G) where two vertices ofP (G) are adjacent if and only if the corresponding sets have an edge between them. The Ulam number ofG is defined as the minimum of the maximum degree ofP (G) where the minimum is taken over all uniformly bounded partitionsP. We have characterized the graphs with Ulam number 0, 1, and 2. Restricting the partitions of the vertex set to connected subsets, we obtain the connected Ulam number ofG. We have evaluated the connected Ulam numbers for several infinite graphs. For instance we have shown that the connected Ulam number is 4 ifG is an infinite grid graph. We have settled the Ulam conjecture for the connected case by proving that the connected Ulam number is 6 for an infinite triangular grid graph. The general Ulam conjecture is equivalent to proving that the Ulam number of the infinite triangular grid graph equals 6. We also describe some interesting geometric consequences of the Ulam number, mainly concerning good drawings of infinite graphs.  相似文献   

20.
A face of an edge‐colored plane graph is called rainbow if the number of colors used on its edges is equal to its size. The maximum number of colors used in an edge coloring of a connected plane graph Gwith no rainbow face is called the edge‐rainbowness of G. In this paper we prove that the edge‐rainbowness of Gequals the maximum number of edges of a connected bridge face factor H of G, where a bridge face factor H of a plane graph Gis a spanning subgraph H of Gin which every face is incident with a bridge and the interior of any one face fF(G) is a subset of the interior of some face f′∈F(H). We also show upper and lower bounds on the edge‐rainbowness of graphs based on edge connectivity, girth of the dual graphs, and other basic graph invariants. Moreover, we present infinite classes of graphs where these equalities are attained. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Graph Theory 62: 84–99, 2009  相似文献   

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