Symmetric hypergraph theorem
The Symmetric hypergraph theorem is a theorem in combinatorics that puts an upper bound on the chromatic number of a graph (or hypergraph in general). The original reference for this paper is unknown at the moment, and has been called folklore.[1]
Statement
A group acting on a set
is called transitive if given any two elements
and
in
, there exists an element
of
such that
. A graph (or hypergraph) is called symmetric if its automorphism group is transitive.
Theorem. Let be a symmetric hypergraph. Let
, and let
denote the chromatic number of
, and let
denote the independence number of
. Then
![\chi(H) < 1 + \frac{m}{\alpha(H)}\ln m.](../I/m/a5ca9d7038d8543bd8933e5dc11a2f71.png)
Applications
This theorem has applications to Ramsey theory, specifically graph Ramsey theory. Using this theorem, a relationship between the graph Ramsey numbers and the extremal numbers can be shown (see Graham-Rothschild-Spencer for the details).
See also
Notes
- ↑ R. Graham, B. Rothschild, J. Spencer. Ramsey Theory. 2nd ed., Wiley, New-York, 1990.