The Erdos-Rado sunflower lemma: Difference between revisions

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* [https://gilkalai.wordpress.com/2015/11/03/polymath10-the-erdos-rado-delta-system-conjecture Polymath10: The Erdos Rado Delta System Conjecture], Gil Kalai, Nov 2, 2015.  <I>Inactive</I>
* [https://gilkalai.wordpress.com/2015/11/03/polymath10-the-erdos-rado-delta-system-conjecture Polymath10: The Erdos Rado Delta System Conjecture], Gil Kalai, Nov 2, 2015.  <I>Inactive</I>
* [https://gilkalai.wordpress.com/2015/11/11/polymath10-post-2-homological-approach/ Polymath10, Post 2: Homological Approach], Gil Kalai, Nov 10, 2015. <B>Active</B>
* [https://gilkalai.wordpress.com/2015/11/11/polymath10-post-2-homological-approach/ Polymath10, Post 2: Homological Approach], Gil Kalai, Nov 10, 2015. <I>Inactive</I>
* [https://gilkalai.wordpress.com/2015/12/08/polymath-10-post-3-how-are-we-doing/ Polymath 10 Post 3: How are we doing?], Gil Kalai, Dec 8, 2015. <B>Active</B>


== External links ==
== External links ==

Revision as of 08:51, 8 December 2015

The problem

A sunflower (a.k.a. Delta-system) of size [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math] is a family of sets [math]\displaystyle{ A_1, A_2, \dots, A_r }[/math] such that every element that belongs to more than one of the sets belongs to all of them. A basic and simple result of Erdos and Rado asserts that

Erdos-Rado Delta-system theorem: There is a function [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r) }[/math] so that every family [math]\displaystyle{ \cal F }[/math] of [math]\displaystyle{ k }[/math]-sets with more than [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r) }[/math] members contains a sunflower of size [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math].

(We denote by [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r) }[/math] the smallest integer that suffices for the assertion of the theorem to be true.) The simple proof giving [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r)\le k! (r-1)^k }[/math] can be found here.

The best known general upper bound on [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r) }[/math] (in the regime where [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math] is bounded and [math]\displaystyle{ k }[/math] is large) is

[math]\displaystyle{ \displaystyle f(k,r) \leq D(r,\alpha) k! \left( \frac{(\log\log\log k)^2}{\alpha \log\log k} \right)^k }[/math]

for any [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha \lt 1 }[/math], and some [math]\displaystyle{ D(r,\alpha) }[/math] depending on [math]\displaystyle{ r,\alpha }[/math], proven by Kostkocha from 1996. The objective of this project is to improve this bound, ideally to obtain the Erdos-Rado conjecture

[math]\displaystyle{ \displaystyle f(k,r) \leq C^k }[/math]

for some [math]\displaystyle{ C=C(r) }[/math] depending on [math]\displaystyle{ r }[/math] only. This is known for [math]\displaystyle{ r=1,2 }[/math](indeed we have [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r)=1 }[/math] in those cases) but remains open for larger r.

Variants and notation

Given a family F of sets and a set S, the star of S is the subfamily of those sets in F containing S, and the link of S is obtained from the star of S by deleting the elements of S from every set in the star. (We use the terms link and star because we do want to consider eventually hypergraphs as geometric/topological objects.)

We can restate the delta system problem as follows: f(k,r) is the maximum size of a family of k-sets such that the link of every set A does not contain r pairwise disjoint sets.

Let f(k,r;m,n) denote the largest cardinality of a family of k-sets from {1,2,…,n} such that that the link of every set A of size at most m-1 does not contain r pairwise disjoint sets. Thus f(k,r) = f(k,r;k,n) for n large enough.

Conjecture 1: [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r;m,n) \leq C_r^k n^{k-m} }[/math] for some [math]\displaystyle{ C_r }[/math] depending only on r.

This conjecture implies the Erdos-Ko-Rado conjecture (set m=k). The Erdos-Ko-Rado theorem asserts that

[math]\displaystyle{ f(k,2;1,n) = \binom{n-1}{k-1} }[/math] (1)

when [math]\displaystyle{ n \geq 2k }[/math], which is consistent with Conjecture 1. More generally, Erdos, Ko, and Rado showed

[math]\displaystyle{ f(k,2;m,n) = \binom{n-m}{k-m} }[/math]

when [math]\displaystyle{ n }[/math] is sufficiently large depending on k,m. The case of smaller n was treated by several authors culminating in the work of Ahlswede and Khachatrian.

Erdos conjectured that

[math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r;1,n) = \max( \binom{rk-1}{k}, \binom{n}{k} - \binom{n-r}{k} ) }[/math]

for [math]\displaystyle{ n \geq rk }[/math], generalising (1), and again consistent with Conjecture 1. This was established for k=2 by Erdos and Gallai, and for r=3 by Frankl (building on work by Luczak-Mieczkowska).

A family of k-sets is balanced (or k-colored) if it is possible to color the elements with k colors so that every set in the family is colorful.

Reduction (folklore): It is enough to prove Erdos-Rado Delta-system conjecture for the balanced case.

Proof: Divide the elements into d color classes at random and take only colorful sets. The expected size of the surviving colorful sets is k!/k^k|F|.

Hyperoptimistic conjecture: The maximum size of a balanced collection of k-sets without a sunflower of size r is (r-1)^k.

Disproven for [math]\displaystyle{ k=3,r=3 }[/math]: set [math]\displaystyle{ |V_1|=|V_2|=|V_3|=3 }[/math] and use ijk to denote the 3-set consisting of the i^th element of V_1, j^th element of V_2, and k^th element of V_3. Then 000, 001, 010, 011, 100, 101, 112, 122, 212 is a balanced family of 9 3-sets without a 3-sunflower.

Small values

Below is a collection of known constructions for small values, taken from Abbott-Exoo. Boldface stands for matching upper bound (and best known upper bounds are planned to be added to other entries). Also note that for [math]\displaystyle{ k }[/math] fixed we have [math]\displaystyle{ f(k,r)=k^r+o(k^r) }[/math] from Kostochka-Rödl-Talysheva.

r\k 2 3 4 5 6 ...k
3 6 20 54- 160- 600- ~3.16^k
4 10 38- 114- 380- 1444- ~3.36^k
5 20 88- 400- 1760- 8000- ~4.24^k
6 27 146- 730- 3942- 21316- ~5.26^k

Threads

External links

Bibliography

Edits to improve the bibliography (by adding more links, Mathscinet numbers, bibliographic info, etc.) are welcome!