The method of (hypergraph) containers is a powerful tool that can help characterize the typical structure and/or answer extremal questions about families of discrete objects with a prescribed set of local constraints. Such questions arise naturally in
extremal graph theory
Extremal graph theory is a branch of combinatorics, itself an area of mathematics, that lies at the intersection of extremal combinatorics and graph theory. In essence, extremal graph theory studies how global properties of a graph influence loc ...
,
additive combinatorics
Additive combinatorics is an area of combinatorics in mathematics. One major area of study in additive combinatorics are ''inverse problems'': given the size of the sumset ''A'' + ''B'' is small, what can we say about the structures of A ...
,
discrete geometry
Discrete geometry and combinatorial geometry are branches of geometry that study combinatorial properties and constructive methods of discrete geometric objects. Most questions in discrete geometry involve finite or discrete sets of basic ge ...
,
coding theory
Coding theory is the study of the properties of codes and their respective fitness for specific applications. Codes are used for data compression, cryptography, error detection and correction, data transmission and data storage. Codes are stud ...
, and
Ramsey theory
Ramsey theory, named after the British mathematician and philosopher Frank P. Ramsey, is a branch of mathematics that focuses on the appearance of order in a substructure given a structure of a known size. Problems in Ramsey theory typically ask ...
; they include some of the most classical problems in the associated fields.
These problems can be expressed as questions of the following form: given a
hypergraph
In mathematics, a hypergraph is a generalization of a graph in which an edge can join any number of vertices. In contrast, in an ordinary graph, an edge connects exactly two vertices.
Formally, an undirected hypergraph H is a pair H = (X,E) ...
on finite vertex set with edge set (i.e. a collection of subsets of with some size constraints), what can we say about the
independent sets of (i.e. those subsets of that contain no element of )? The hypergraph container lemma provides a method for tackling such questions.
History
One of the foundational problems of extremal graph theory, dating to work of Mantel in 1907 and
Turán from the 1940s, asks to characterize those graphs that do not contain a copy of some fixed
forbidden as a subgraph. In a different domain, one of the motivating questions in additive combinatorics is understanding how large a set of integers can be without containing a -term
arithmetic progression
An arithmetic progression or arithmetic sequence () is a sequence of numbers such that the difference between the consecutive terms is constant. For instance, the sequence 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, . . . is an arithmetic progression with a common differ ...
, with upper bounds on this size given by
Roth Roth may refer to:
Places
Germany
* Roth (district), in Bavaria, Germany
** Roth, Bavaria, capital of that district
** Roth (electoral district), a federal electoral district
* Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany:
** Roth an der Our, in the district ...
(
) and
Szemerédi (general ).
The method of containers (in graphs) was initially pioneered by Kleitman and Winston in 1980, who bounded the number of lattices and graphs without 4-cycles. Container-style lemmas were independently developed by multiple mathematicians in different contexts, notably including Sapozhenko, who initially used this approach in 2002-2003 to enumerate independent sets in
regular graphs
In graph theory, a regular graph is a graph where each vertex has the same number of neighbors; i.e. every vertex has the same degree or valency. A regular directed graph must also satisfy the stronger condition that the indegree and outdegree o ...
, sum-free sets in abelian groups, and study a variety of other enumeration problems
A generalization of these ideas to a hypergraph container lemma was devised independently by Saxton and Thomason and Balogh, Morris, and Samotij in 2015, inspired by a variety of previous related work.
Main idea and informal statement
Many problems in combinatorics can be recast as questions about independent sets in graphs and hypergraphs. For example, suppose we wish to understand subsets of integers to , which we denote by