Research group
Combinatorics
Tue, 24 May 2022

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Size-Ramsey numbers of graphs with maximum degree three

Nemanja Draganić
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract

The size-Ramsey number $\hat{r}(H)$ of a graph $H$ is the smallest number of edges a (host) graph $G$ can have, such that for any red/blue coloring of $G$, there is a monochromatic copy of $H$ in $G$. Recently, Conlon, Nenadov and Trujić showed that if $H$ is a graph on $n$ vertices and maximum degree three, then $\hat{r}(H) = O(n^{8/5})$, improving upon the bound of $n^{5/3 + o(1)}$ by Kohayakawa, Rödl, Schacht and Szemerédi. In our paper, we show that $\hat{r}(H)\leq n^{3/2+o(1)}$. While the previously used host graphs were vanilla binomial random graphs, we prove our result by using a novel host graph construction.
We also discuss why our bound is a natural barrier for the existing methods.
This is joint work with Kalina Petrova.

Tue, 10 May 2022

14:00 - 15:00
L4

A Ramsey problem in blowups of graphs

António Girão
(Oxford)
Abstract

For graphs $G$ and $H$, we say $G \stackrel{r}{\to} H$ if every $r$-colouring of the edges of $G$ contains a monochromatic copy of $H$. Let $H[t]$ denote the $t$-blowup of $H$. The blowup Ramsey number $B(G \stackrel{r}{\to} H;t)$ is the minimum $n$ such that $G[n] \stackrel{r}{\to} H[t]$. Fox, Luo and Wigderson refined an upper bound of Souza, showing that, given $G$, $H$ and $r$ such that $G \stackrel{r}{\to} H$, there exist constants $a=a(G,H,r)$ and $b=b(H,r)$ such that for all $t \in \mathbb{N}$, $B(G \stackrel{r}{\to} H;t) \leq ab^t$. They conjectured that there exist some graphs $H$ for which the constant $a$ depending on $G$ is necessary. We prove this conjecture by showing that the statement is true when $H$ is a $3$-chromatically connected, which includes all cliques on $3$ or more vertices. We are also able to show perhaps surprisingly that for any forest $F$ there is $f(F,t)$ such that  for any $G \stackrel{r}{\to} H$, $B(G \stackrel{r}{\to} H;t)\leq f(F,t)$ i.e. the function does not depend on the ground graph $G$. This is joint work with Robert Hancock.

Tue, 03 May 2022

14:00 - 15:00
L4

The structure of planar graphs

David Wood
(Monash University)
Abstract

This talk is about the global structure of planar graphs and other more general graph classes. The starting point is the Lipton-Tarjan separator theorem, followed by Baker's decomposition of a planar graph into layers with bounded treewidth. I will then move onto layered treewidth, which is a more global version of Baker's decomposition. Layered treewidth is a precursor to the recent development of row treewidth, which has been the key to solving several open problems. Finally, I will describe generalisations for arbitrary minor-closed classes.

Tue, 15 Mar 2022
14:00
C6

Colouring locally sparse graphs with the first moment method

Eoin Hurley
(Heidelberg University)
Abstract

A classical theorem of Molloy and Johansson states that if a graph is triangle free and has maximum degree at most $\Delta$, then it has chromatic number at most $\frac{\Delta}{\log \Delta}$. This was extended to graphs with few edges in their neighbourhoods by Alon-Krivelevich and Sudakov, and to list chromatic number by Vu. I will give a full and self-contained proof of these results that relies only on induction and the first moment method.

Tue, 01 Mar 2022
14:00
L4

Independent sets in random subgraphs of the hypercube

Gal Kronenberg
(Oxford)
Abstract

Independent sets in bipartite regular graphs have been studied extensively in combinatorics, probability, computer science and more. The problem of counting independent sets is particularly interesting in the d-dimensional hypercube $\{0,1\}^d$, motivated by the lattice gas hardcore model from statistical physics. Independent sets also turn out to be very interesting in the context of random graphs.

The number of independent sets in the hypercube $\{0,1\}^d$ was estimated precisely by Korshunov and Sapozhenko in the 1980s and recently refined by Jenssen and Perkins.

In this talk we will discuss new results on the number of independent sets in a random subgraph of the hypercube. The results extend to the hardcore model and rely on an analysis of the antiferromagnetic Ising model on the hypercube.

This talk is based on joint work with Yinon Spinka.

Tue, 22 Feb 2022
14:00
C2

Minimum degree stability and locally colourable graphs

Freddie Illingworth
(Oxford)
Abstract

We tie together two natural but, a priori, different themes. As a starting point consider Erdős and Simonovits's classical edge stability for an $(r + 1)$-chromatic graph $H$. This says that any $n$-vertex $H$-free graph with $(1 − 1/r + o(1)){n \choose 2}$ edges is close to (within $o(n^2)$ edges of) $r$-partite. This is false if $1 − 1/r$ is replaced by any smaller constant. However, instead of insisting on many edges, what if we ask that the $n$-vertex graph has large minimum degree? This is the basic question of minimum degree stability: what constant $c$ guarantees that any $n$-vertex $H$-free graph with minimum degree greater than $cn$ is close to $r$-partite? $c$ depends not just on chromatic number of $H$ but also on its finer structure.

Somewhat surprisingly, answering the minimum degree stability question requires understanding locally colourable graphs -- graphs in which every neighbourhood has small chromatic number -- with large minimum degree. This is a natural local-to-global colouring question: if every neighbourhood is big and has small chromatic number must the whole graph have small chromatic number? The triangle-free case has a rich history. The more general case has some similarities but also striking differences.

Tue, 08 Feb 2022
14:00
Virtual

Large hypergraphs without tight cycles

Barnabas Janzer
(Cambridge)
Abstract

An $r$-uniform tight cycle of length $k>r$ is a hypergraph with vertices $v_1,\ldots,v_k$ and edges $\{v_i,v_{i+1},…,v_{i+r-1}\}$ (for all $i$), with the indices taken modulo $k$. Sós, and independently Verstraëte, asked the following question: how many edges can there be in an $n$-vertex $r$-uniform hypergraph if it contains no tight cycles of any length? In this talk I will review some known results, and present recent progress on this problem.

Tue, 01 Feb 2022
14:00
Virtual

Recoloring version of Hadwiger's conjecture

Clément Legrand-Duchesne
(LaBRI Bordeaux)
Abstract

Las Vergnas and Meyniel conjectured in 1981 that all the $t$-colorings of a $K_t$-minor free graph are Kempe equivalent. This conjecture can be seen as a reconfiguration counterpoint to Hadwiger's conjecture, although it neither implies it or is implied by it. We prove that for all positive $\epsilon$, for all large enough $t$, there exists a graph with no $K_{(2/3 + \epsilon)t}$ minor whose $t$-colorings are not all Kempe equivalent, thereby strongly disproving this conjecture, along with two other conjectures of the same paper.

Tue, 25 Jan 2022
14:00
Virtual

Induced Poset Saturation

Maria-Romina Ivan
(Cambridge)
Abstract

Given a fixed poset $\mathcal P$, we say that a family $\mathcal F$ of subsets of $[n]$ is $\mathcal P$-free if it does not contain an (induced) copy of $\mathcal P$. And we say that $F$ is $\mathcal P$-saturated if it is maximal $\mathcal P$-free. How small can a $\mathcal P$-saturated family be? The smallest such size is the induced saturation number of $\mathcal P$, $\text{sat}^*(n, \mathcal P)$. Even for very small posets, the question of the growth speed of $\text{sat}^*(n,\mathcal P)$ seems to be hard. We present background on this problem and some recent results.

Tue, 30 Nov 2021
14:00
L6

The n-queens problem

Candy Bowtell
(Oxford/Birmingham)
Abstract

The $n$-queens problem asks how many ways there are to place $n$ queens on an $n \times n$ chessboard so that no two queens can attack one another, and the toroidal $n$-queens problem asks the same question where the board is considered on the surface of a torus. Let $Q(n)$ denote the number of $n$-queens configurations on the classical board and $T(n)$ the number of toroidal $n$-queens configurations. The toroidal problem was first studied in 1918 by Pólya who showed that $T(n)>0$ if and only if $n \equiv 1,5 \mod 6$. Much more recently Luria showed that $T(n)\leq ((1+o(1))ne^{-3})^n$ and conjectured equality when $n \equiv 1,5 \mod 6$. We prove this conjecture, prior to which no non-trivial lower bounds were known to hold for all (sufficiently large) $n \equiv 1,5 \mod 6$. We also show that $Q(n)\geq((1+o(1))ne^{-3})^n$ for all $n \in \mathbb{N}$ which was independently proved by Luria and Simkin and, combined with our toroidal result, completely settles a conjecture of Rivin, Vardi and Zimmerman regarding both $Q(n)$ and $T(n)$. 

In this talk we'll discuss our methods used to prove these results. A crucial element of this is translating the problem to one of counting matchings in a $4$-partite $4$-uniform hypergraph. Our strategy combines a random greedy algorithm to count `almost' configurations with a complex absorbing strategy that uses ideas from the methods of randomised algebraic construction and iterative absorption.

This is joint work with Peter Keevash.

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