Corners Theorem
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In
arithmetic combinatorics In mathematics, arithmetic combinatorics is a field in the intersection of number theory, combinatorics, ergodic theory and harmonic analysis. Scope Arithmetic combinatorics is about combinatorial estimates associated with arithmetic operations ...
, the corners theorem states that for every \varepsilon>0, for large enough N, any set of at least \varepsilon N^2 points in the N\times N grid \^2 contains a corner, i.e., a triple of points of the form \ with h\ne 0. It was first proved by
Miklós Ajtai Miklós Ajtai (born 2 July 1946) is a computer scientist at the IBM Almaden Research Center, United States. In 2003, he received the Knuth Prize for his numerous contributions to the field, including a classic sorting network algorithm (devel ...
and
Endre Szemerédi Endre Szemerédi (; born August 21, 1940) is a Hungarian-American mathematician and computer scientist, working in the field of combinatorics and theoretical computer science. He has been the State of New Jersey Professor of computer science a ...
in 1974 using
Szemerédi's theorem In arithmetic combinatorics, Szemerédi's theorem is a result concerning arithmetic progressions in subsets of the integers. In 1936, Erdős and Turán conjectured that every set of integers ''A'' with positive natural density contains a ''k''- ...
.. In 2003,
József Solymosi József Solymosi is a Hungarian-Canadian mathematician and a professor of mathematics at the University of British Columbia. His main research interests are arithmetic combinatorics, discrete geometry, graph theory, and combinatorial number theo ...
gave a short proof using the
triangle removal lemma In graph theory, the graph removal lemma states that when a graph contains few copies of a given subgraph, then all of the copies can be eliminated by removing a small number of edges. The special case in which the subgraph is a triangle is known ...
.


Statement

Define a corner to be a subset of \mathbb^2 of the form \, where x,y,h\in \mathbb and h\ne 0. For every \varepsilon>0, there exists a positive integer N(\varepsilon) such that for any N\ge N(\varepsilon), any subset A\subseteq\^2 with size at least \varepsilon N^2 contains a corner. The condition h\ne 0 can be relaxed to h>0 by showing that if A is dense, then it has some dense subset that is centrally symmetric.


Proof overview

What follows is a sketch of Solymosi's argument. Suppose A\subset\^2 is corner-free. Construct an auxiliary tripartite graph G with parts X=\, Y=\, and Z=\, where x_i corresponds to the line x=i, y_j corresponds to the line y=j, and z_k corresponds to the line x+y=k. Connect two vertices if the intersection of their corresponding lines lies in A. Note that a triangle in G corresponds to a corner in A, except in the trivial case where the lines corresponding to the vertices of the triangle concur at a point in A. It follows that every edge of G is in exactly one triangle, so by the
triangle removal lemma In graph theory, the graph removal lemma states that when a graph contains few copies of a given subgraph, then all of the copies can be eliminated by removing a small number of edges. The special case in which the subgraph is a triangle is known ...
, G has o(, V(G), ^2) edges, so , A, =o(N^2), as desired.


Quantitative bounds

Let r_(N) be the size of the largest subset of 2 which contains no corner. The best known bounds are :\frac\le r_(N)\le \frac, where c_1\approx 1.822 and c_2\approx 0.0137. The lower bound is due to Green, building on the work of Linial and Shraibman. The upper bound is due to Shkredov.


Multidimensional extension

A corner in \mathbb^d is a set of points of the form \\cup\, where e_1,\ldots,e_d is the standard basis of \mathbb^d, and h\ne 0. The natural extension of the corners theorem to this setting can be shown using the
hypergraph removal lemma In graph theory, the hypergraph removal lemma states that when a hypergraph contains few copies of a given sub-hypergraph, then all of the copies can be eliminated by removing a small number of hyperedges. It is a generalization of the graph remova ...
, in the spirit of Solymosi's proof. The hypergraph removal lemma was shown independently by Gowers and Nagle, Rödl, Schacht and Skokan.


Multidimensional Szemerédi's Theorem

The multidimensional Szemerédi theorem states that for any fixed finite subset S\subseteq\mathbb^d, and for every \varepsilon>0, there exists a positive integer N(S,\varepsilon) such that for any N\ge N(S,\varepsilon), any subset A\subseteq\^d with size at least \varepsilon N^d contains a subset of the form a\cdot S+h. This theorem follows from the multidimensional corners theorem by a simple projection argument. In particular,
Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions Roth's theorem on arithmetic progressions is a result in additive combinatorics concerning the existence of arithmetic progressions in subsets of the natural numbers. It was first proven by Klaus Roth in 1953. Roth's theorem is a special case of S ...
follows directly from the ordinary corners theorem.


References

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External links


Proof of the corners theorem
on polymath. 1974 introductions 1974 in science Ramsey theory Additive combinatorics Theorems in combinatorics 20th century in mathematics