Questions tagged [ramsey-theory]

Use for questions in Ramsey Theory, i.e. regarding how large a structure must be before it is guaranteed to have a certain property. Please be especially careful not to ask open questions in this tag.

Please be especially careful not to ask open questions in this tag.

Ramsey theory refers to questions of the form "how large must a structure be before it is guaranteed to have a certain property?" Often, the theme is that in a sufficiently large structure, a highly ordered substructure will appear.

A relatively simple example of a result in Ramsey theory is the Theorem on Friends and Strangers.

In any party of at least six people either at least three of them are (pairwise) mutual strangers or at least three of them are (pairwise) mutual acquaintances.

Other well-known results in Ramsey theory include:

  • Ramsey's theorem, which generalizes the Theorem on Friends and Strangers to larger subgroups than size $3$. Many other problems in Ramsey theory are variations on this result, and involve coloring graphs.
  • Schur's theorem, which says that for any $r$, there exists a sufficiently large $N$ such that whenever the integers $1, 2, \dots, N$ are each given one of $r$ colors, there will be three integers $x, y, x+y$ all of the same color. More generally, additive Ramsey theory deals with results about the integers and other additive groups, including results such as Van der Waerden's theorem.
  • The Hales–Jewett theorem which, informally, states that for any parameters $t$ and $r$ there is a sufficiently large dimension such that any $r$-coloring of a $t \times t \times \dots \times t$ grid contains a monochromatic line. More generally, Euclidean Ramsey theory deals with results about geometric objects.

Proofs in Ramsey theory often give extremely large bounds on how large a structure must be before it has the desired property.

A standard introduction to the area is the textbook Ramsey Theory by Graham, Rothschild, and Spencer.

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Graph theoretic proof: For six irrational numbers, there are three among them such that the sum of any two of them is irrational.

Problem. Let there be six irrational numbers. Prove that there exists three irrational numbers among them such that the sum of any two of those irrational numbers is also irrational. I have tried to prove it in the following way, but I am not…
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$n$ people sitting on a circular table without repeating neighbour-sets

I made this problem up and it's been bothering me ever since. We're organising team activities in our company for the next few days. Our team consists of $n$ people seated on a circular table. To spice it up, we plan to do it in such a way that no…
P.K.
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Why are there only a few known Ramsey numbers?

Can someone explain in a simple way why there are so few known exact Ramsey numbers? I guess it's because there are no efficient algorithms for this task, but are there so many combinations to test? And an additional question: How are the bounds…
Fred Funks
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Why König's lemma isn't "obvious"?

I keep facing König's lemma "Every finitely branching infinite tree over $\mathbb{N}$ has infinite branch". Why it is not taken "obvious" but needs a careful proof? It seems somewhat obvious, but I guess I overlook something.
user8523
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Does a random set of points in the plane contain a large empty convex polygon?

Suppose I choose $n$ points uniformly at random from the unit square $[0,1]\times [0,1]$, obtaining a set of points $S=\{p_1,\ldots, p_n\}\subset [0,1]\times [0,1]$. Then $S$ may contain subsets which span an empty convex polygon. For example, in…
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Graham's Number : Why so big?

Can someone give me an idea of how R.Graham reached Graham's Number as an upper bound on the solution of the related problem ? Thanks !
thetruth
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Monochromatic squares in a colored plane

Color every point in the real plane using the colors blue,yellow only. It can be shown that there exists a rectangle that has all vertices with the same color. Is it possible to show that there exists a square that has all vertices with the same…
Amr
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Triangles defined on an infinite Go board by same-colored stones

You start with an infinite Go board. On every point of the board you place one colored stone. There are $n>1$ different colors. Find all natural numbers $n$ that no matter how the stones are colored, three stones of the same color form the vertices…
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An example showing that van der Waerden's theorem is not true for infinite arithmetic progressions

One of the possible formulations of Van der Waerden's theorem is the following: If $\mathbb N=A_1\cup \dots\cup A_k$ is a partition of the set $\mathbb N$, then one of the sets $A_1,\dots,A_k$ contains finite arithmetic progressions of arbitrary…
Martin Sleziak
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How many 2-edge-colourings of $K_n$ are there?

I'm writing a paper on Ramsey Theory and it would be interesting and useful to know the number of essentially different 2-edge-colourings of $K_n$ there are. By that I mean the number of essentially different maps $\chi:E(K_n)\to\{1,2\}$. Of course,…
Clum
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Congruent quadrilaterals in a tri-colored $72$-gon

I recently watched a movie (A Brilliant Young Mind) in which this problem appeared: Let the vertices of a regular $72$-gon be colored red, blue, and green in equal parts. Show that there are $4$ vertices of each color such that the resulting…
EuYu
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Good way to learn Ramsey Theory

What are some good books on Ramsey theory? I have Van Lint's book on Combinatorics: is this enough preparation to start reading about Ramsey theory? I want a book that includes important results and has good proofs.
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van der Waerden's original proof

I am looking for a book/site which has the English translation of the proof of van der Waerden's theorem as presented by van der Waerden himself. In other words is the translation of the paper: van der Waerden, B. L. "Beweis einer Baudetschen…
Shahab
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Coloring of positive integers

Suppose $f:\mathbb{Z}^+\longrightarrow X$ is a function, with $X$ a finite set. Is it true that there are $a,b\in\mathbb{Z}^+$ such that $f(a)=f(b)=f(a+b)$.
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Showing that $K_7$ contains at least 4 monochromatic triangles

A problem in my book is: Let the edges of $K_7$ be colored with the colors red and blue. Show that there are at least four subgraphs $K_3$ with all three edges the same color (monochromatic triangles). Also show that equality can occur. By the…
Shahab
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