Families of triples with high minimum degree are hamiltonian
In this paper we show that every family of triples, that is, a 3-uniform hypergraph, with minimum degree at least [...] contains a tight Hamiltonian cycle
In this paper we show that every family of triples, that is, a 3-uniform hypergraph, with minimum degree at least [...] contains a tight Hamiltonian cycle
Given a graph H and an integer r ≥ 2, let G → (H,r) denote the Ramsey property of a graph G, that is, every r-coloring of the edges of G results in a monochromatic copy of H. Further, let and define the Ramsey density as the infimum of m(G) over all graphs G such that G → (H,r). In the first part of this paper we show that when H is a complete graph Kₖ on k vertices, then , where R = R(k;r) is the classical Ramsey number. As a corollary we derive a new proof of the result credited to Chvatál...
For two graphs, G and F, and an integer r ≥ 2 we write G → (F)r if every r-coloring of the edges of G results in a monochromatic copy of F. In 1995, the first two authors established a threshold edge probability for the Ramsey property G(n, p) → (F)r, where G(n, p) is a random graph obtained by including each edge of the complete graph on n vertices, independently, with probability p. The original proof was based on the regularity lemma of Szemerédi and this led to tower-type dependencies between...
For an integer and a -uniform hypergraph , let be the largest integer such that every -element set of vertices of belongs to at least edges of . Further, let be the smallest integer such that every -uniform hypergraph on vertices and with contains a perfect matching. The parameter has been completely determined for all and large divisible by by Rödl, Ruci’nski, and Szemerédi in [, submitted]. The values of are very close to . In fact, the function , where depends...
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