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Colouring set families without monochromatic k-chains

A coloured version of classic extremal problems dates back to Erdős and Rothschild, who in 1974 asked which n-vertex graph has the maximum number of 2-edge-colourings without monochromatic triangles. They conjectured that the answer is simply given by the largest triangle-free graph. Since then, thi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of combinatorial theory. Series A 2019-11, Vol.168, p.84-119
Main Authors: Das, Shagnik, Glebov, Roman, Sudakov, Benny, Tran, Tuan
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:A coloured version of classic extremal problems dates back to Erdős and Rothschild, who in 1974 asked which n-vertex graph has the maximum number of 2-edge-colourings without monochromatic triangles. They conjectured that the answer is simply given by the largest triangle-free graph. Since then, this new class of coloured extremal problems has been extensively studied by various researchers. In this paper we pursue the Erdős–Rothschild versions of Sperner's Theorem, the classic result in extremal set theory on the size of the largest antichain in the Boolean lattice, and Erdős' extension to k-chain-free families. Given a family F of subsets of [n], we define an (r,k)-colouring of F to be an r-colouring of the sets without any monochromatic k-chains F1⊂F2⊂…⊂Fk. We prove that for n sufficiently large in terms of k, the largest k-chain-free families also maximise the number of (2,k)-colourings. We also show that the middle level, ([n]⌊n/2⌋), maximises the number of (3,2)-colourings, and give asymptotic results on the maximum possible number of (r,k)-colourings whenever r(k−1) is divisible by three.
ISSN:0097-3165
1096-0899
DOI:10.1016/j.jcta.2019.05.014