fabrication defects
Thresholds: from small p regime to general
Abstract
Let $p_c$ and $q_c$ be the threshold and the expectation threshold, respectively, of an increasing family $F$ of subsets of a finite set $X$. Recently, Park and Pham proved Kahn–Kalai conjecture stating that a not-too-large multiple of $q_c$ is an upper bound on $p_c$. In the talk, I will present a slight improvement to the Park–Pham theorem, which is obtained from transferring the threshold result from the small $p$ regime to general $p$. Based on joint work with Oliver Riordan.
A Ramsey Characterisation of Eventually Periodic Words
Abstract
A factorisation $x=u_1u_2\cdots$ of an infinite word $x$ on alphabet $X$ is called ‘super-monochromatic’, for a given colouring of the finite words $X^{\ast}$ on alphabet $X$, if each word $u_{k_1}u_{k_2}\cdots u_{k_n}$, where $k_1<\cdots<k_n$, is the same colour. A direct application of Hindman’s theorem shows that if $x$ is eventually periodic, then for every finite colouring of $X^{\ast}$, there exist a suffix of $x$ that admits a super-monochromatic factorisation. What about the converse?
In this talk we show that the converse does indeed hold: thus a word $x$ is eventually periodic if and only if for every finite colouring of $X^{\ast}$ there is a suffix of $x$ having a super-monochromatic factorisation. This has been a conjecture in the community for some time. Our main tool is a Ramsey result about alternating sums. This provides a strong link between Ramsey theory and the combinatorics of infinite words.
Joint work with Imre Leader and Luca Q. Zamboni