Ramsey-Turán theory is a subfield of
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 ...
. It studies common generalizations of
Ramsey's theorem
In combinatorics, Ramsey's theorem, in one of its graph-theoretic forms, states that one will find monochromatic cliques in any edge labelling (with colours) of a sufficiently large complete graph. To demonstrate the theorem for two colours (s ...
and
Turán's theorem
In graph theory, Turán's theorem bounds the number of edges that can be included in an undirected graph that does not have a complete subgraph of a given size. It is one of the central results of extremal graph theory, an area studying the large ...
. In brief, Ramsey-Turán theory asks for the maximum number of edges a
graph
Graph may refer to:
Mathematics
*Graph (discrete mathematics), a structure made of vertices and edges
**Graph theory, the study of such graphs and their properties
*Graph (topology), a topological space resembling a graph in the sense of discre ...
which satisfies constraints on its subgraphs and structure can have. The theory organizes many natural questions which arise in extremal graph theory. The first authors to formalize the central ideas of the theory were
Erdős
Erdős, Erdos, or Erdoes is a Hungarian surname.
People with the surname include:
* Ágnes Erdős (born 1950), Hungarian politician
* Brad Erdos (born 1990), Canadian football player
* Éva Erdős (born 1964), Hungarian handball player
* Józ ...
and
Sós in 1969,
though mathematicians had previously investigated many Ramsey-Turán-type problems.
Ramsey's theorem and Turán's theorem
Ramsey's theorem for two colors and the complete graph, proved in its original form in 1930, states that for any positive integer there exists an integer large enough that for any coloring of the edges of the
complete graph
In the mathematical field of graph theory, a complete graph is a simple undirected graph in which every pair of distinct vertices is connected by a unique edge. A complete digraph is a directed graph in which every pair of distinct vertices ...
using two colors has a monochoromatic copy of
. More generally, for any graphs
, there is a threshold
such that if
and the edges of
are colored arbitrarily with
colors, then for some
there is a
in the
th color.
Turán's theorem, proved in 1941, characterizes the graph with the maximal number of edges on
vertices which does not contain a
. Specifically, the theorem states that for all positive integers
, the number of edges of an
-vertex graph which does not contain
as a subgraph is at most
and that the maximum is attained uniquely by the
Turán graph
The Turán graph, denoted by T(n,r), is a complete multipartite graph; it is formed by partition of a set, partitioning a set of n vertices into r subsets, with sizes as equal as possible, and then connecting two vertices by an edge if and only if ...
.
Both of these classic results ask questions about how large a graph can be before it possesses a certain property. There is a notable stylistic difference, however. The extremal graph in Turán's theorem has a very strict structure, having a small chromatic number and containing a small number of large
independent sets. On the other hand, the graph considered in Ramsey problems is the complete graph, which has large chromatic number and no nontrivial independent set. A natural way to combine these two kinds of problems is to ask the following question, posed by Andrásfai:
Problem 1: For a given positive integer , let be an -vertex graph not containing and having independence number . What is the maximum number of edges such a graph can have?
Essentially, this question asks for the answer to the Turán problem in a Ramsey setting; it restricts Turán's problem to a subset of graphs with less orderly, more randomlike structure. The following question combines the problems in the opposite direction:
Problem 2: Let be fixed graphs. What is the maximum number of edges an -edge colored graph on vertices can have under the condition that it does not contain an in the th color?
General problem
The backbone of Ramsey-Turán theory is the common generalization of the above problems.
Problem 3: Let be fixed graphs. Let be an -edge-colored -vertex graph satisfying (1)
(2) the subgraph defined by the th color contains no .
What is the maximum number of edges can have? We denote the maximum by .
Ramsey-Turán-type problems are special cases of problem 3. Many cases of this problem remain open, but several interesting cases have been resolved with precise asymptotic solutions.
Notable results
Problem 3 can be divided into three different cases, depending on the restriction on the independence number. There is the restriction-free case, where
, which reduces to the classic Ramsey problem. There is the "intermediate" case, where
for a fixed