Sunflower (mathematics)

In mathematics, a sunflower or 
-system is a collection of sets whose pairwise intersection is constant, and called the kernel.
The 
-lemma, sunflower lemma, and sunflower conjecture give various conditions that imply the existence of a large sunflower in a given collection of sets.
The original term for this concept was "
-system". More recently the term "sunflower", possibly introduced by Deza & Frankl (1981), has been gradually replacing it.
Formal definition
Suppose 
 is a universe set and 
 is a collection of subsets of 
. The collection 
 is a sunflower (or 
-system) if there is a subset 
 of 
 such that for each distinct 
 and 
 in 
, we have 
. In other words, 
 is a sunflower if the pairwise intersection of each set in 
 is constant.
Δ-lemma
The 
-lemma states that every uncountable collection of finite sets contains an uncountable 
-system.
The 
-lemma is a combinatorial set-theoretic tool used in proofs to impose an upper bound on the size of a collection of pairwise incompatible elements in a forcing poset.  It may for example be used as one of the ingredients in a proof showing that it is consistent with Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory that the continuum hypothesis does not hold. It was introduced by Shanin (1946).
Δ-lemma for ω2
If 
 is an 
-sized collection of countable subsets of 
, and if the continuum hypothesis holds, then there is an 
-sized 
-subsystem. Let 
 enumerate 
.  For 
, let 
.  By Fodor's lemma, fix 
 stationary in 
 such that 
 is constantly equal to 
 on 
.
Build 
 of cardinality 
 such that whenever 
 are in 
 then 
.  Using the continuum hypothesis, there are only 
-many countable subsets of 
, so by further thinning we may stabilize the kernel.
Sunflower lemma and conjecture
Erdős & Rado (1960, p. 86) proved the sunflower lemma, stating that if 
 and 
 are positive integers then a collection of 
 sets of cardinality at most 
 contains a sunflower with more than a sets. The sunflower conjecture is one of several variations of the conjecture of  (Erdős & Rado 1960, p. 86)  that the factor of 
 can be replaced by 
 for some constant 
.
References
- Deza, M.; Frankl, P. (1981), "Every large set of equidistant (0,+1,–1)-vectors forms a sunflower", Combinatorica 1 (3): 225–231, doi:10.1007/BF02579328, ISSN 0209-9683, MR 637827
 - Erdős, Paul; Rado, R. (1960), "Intersection theorems for systems of sets", Journal of the London Mathematical Society, Second Series 35 (1): 85–90, doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-35.1.85, ISSN 0024-6107, MR 0111692
 - Jech, Thomas (2003). Set Theory. Springer.
 - Kunen, Kenneth (1980). Set Theory: An Introduction to Independence Proofs. North-Holland. ISBN 0-444-85401-0.
 - Shanin, N. A. (1946), "A theorem from the general theory of sets", C. R. (Doklady) Acad. Sci. URSS (N.S.) 53: 399–400