Ramsey-goodness—and otherwise
2013; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 33; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/s00493-013-2778-4
ISSN1439-6912
AutoresPeter Allen, Graham Brightwell, Jozef Skokan,
Tópico(s)Advanced Topology and Set Theory
ResumoA celebrated result of Chvátal, Rödl, Szemerédi and Trotter states (in slightly weakened form) that, for every natural number Δ, there is a constant r Δ such that, for any connected n-vertex graph G with maximum degree Δ, the Ramsey number R(G,G) is at most r Δ n, provided n is sufficiently large. In 1987, Burr made a strong conjecture implying that one may take r Δ = Δ. However, Graham, Rödl and Ruciński showed, by taking G to be a suitable expander graph, that necessarily r Δ > 2 cΔ for some constant c>0. We show that the use of expanders is essential: if we impose the additional restriction that the bandwidth of G be at most some function β(n)=o(n), then R(G,G)≤(2χ(G)+4)n≤(2Δ+6)n, i.e., r Δ =2Δ+6 suffices. On the other hand, we show that Burr's conjecture itself fails even for P , the kth power of a path P n . Brandt showed that for any c, if Δ is sufficiently large, there are connected n-vertex graphs G with Δ(G)≤Δ but R(G,K 3) > cn. We show that, given Δ and H, there are β>0 and n 0 such that, if G is a connected graph on n≥n 0 vertices with maximum degree at most Δ and bandwidth at most β n , then we have R(G,H)=(χ(H)−1)(n−1)+σ(H), where σ(H) is the smallest size of any part in any χ(H)-partition of H. We also show that the same conclusion holds without any restriction on the maximum degree of G if the bandwidth of G is at most ɛ(H) log n=log logn.
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