Combinatorial theorems in random sets
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Tue, 09/02/2010 14:30 |
David Conlon (Cambridge) |
Combinatorial Theory Seminar |
L3 |
The famous theorem of Szemerédi says that for any natural number and any there exists such that if then any subset of the set of size contains an arithmetic progression of length . We consider the question of when such a theorem holds in a random set. More precisely, we say that a set is -Szemerédi if every subset of that contains at least elements contains an arithmetic progression of length . Let be the random set formed by taking each element of independently with probability . We prove that there is a threshold at about where the probability that is -Szemerédi changes from being almost surely 0 to almost surely 1.
There are many other similar problems within combinatorics. For example, Turán’s theorem and Ramsey’s theorem may be relativised, but until now the precise probability thresholds were not known. Our method seems to apply to all such questions, in each case giving the correct threshold. This is joint work with Tim Gowers. |
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and any
there exists
such that if
then any subset
of the set
of size
contains an arithmetic progression of length
is
-Szemerédi if every subset
of
elements contains an arithmetic progression of length
be the random set formed by taking each element of
independently with probability
. We prove that there is a threshold at about
where the probability that