• Rob Morris, An exponential improvement for diagonal Ramsey

    Room B332 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    The Ramsey number $R(k)$ is the minimum n such that every red-blue colouring of the edges of the complete graph on n vertices contains a monochromatic copy of $K_k$. It has been known since the work of Erdős and Szekeres in 1935, and Erdős in 1947, that $2^{k/2} < R(k) < 4^k$, but in the

  • Jozef Skokan, Separating the edges of a graph by a linear number of paths

    Room B332 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    Recently, Letzter proved that any graph of order n contains a collection P of $O(n \log^*n)$ paths with the following property: for all distinct edges e and f there exists a path in P which contains e but not f. We improve this upper bound to 19n, thus answering a question of Katona and confirming

  • Maria Chudnovsky, Induced subgraphs and tree decompositions

    Room 1501, Bldg. E6-1, KAIST

    Tree decompositions are a powerful tool in both structural graph theory and graph algorithms. Many hard problems become tractable if the input graph is known to have a tree decomposition of bounded “width”. Exhibiting a particular kind of a tree decomposition is also a useful way to describe the structure of a graph. Tree decompositions

  • Oliver Janzer, Small subgraphs with large average degree

    Room B332 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    We study the fundamental problem of finding small dense subgraphs in a given graph. For a real number $s>2$, we prove that every graph on $n$ vertices with average degree at least $d$ contains a subgraph of average degree at least $s$ on at most $nd^{-\frac{s}{s-2}}(\log d)^{O_s(1)}$ vertices. This is optimal up to the polylogarithmic

  • Szymon Toruńczyk, Flip-width: Cops and Robber on dense graphs

    Zoom ID: 869 4632 6610 (ibsdimag)

    We define new graph parameters, called flip-width, that generalize treewidth, degeneracy, and generalized coloring numbers for sparse graphs, and clique-width and twin-width for dense graphs. The flip-width parameters are defined using variants of the Cops and Robber game, in which the robber has speed bounded by a fixed constant r∈N∪{∞}, and the cops perform flips

  • Suyun Jiang (江素云), How connectivity affects the extremal number of trees

    Room B332 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    The Erdős-Sós conjecture states that the maximum number of edges in an $n$-vertex graph without a given $k$-vertex tree is at most $\frac {n(k-2)}{2}$. Despite significant interest, the conjecture remains unsolved. Recently, Caro, Patkós, and Tuza considered this problem for host graphs that are connected. Settling a problem posed by them, for a $k$-vertex tree

  • Minho Cho (조민호), Strong Erdős-Hajnal property on chordal graphs and its variants

    Room B332 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    A graph class $\mathcal{G}$ has the strong Erdős-Hajnal property (SEH-property) if there is a constant $c=c(\mathcal{G}) > 0$ such that for every member $G$ of $\mathcal{G}$, either $G$ or its complement has $K_{m, m}$ as a subgraph where $m \geq \left\lfloor c|V(G)| \right\rfloor$. We prove that the class of chordal graphs satisfies SEH-property with constant

  • Guanghui Wang (王光辉), Embeddings in uniformly dense hypergraphs

    Room B332 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    An archetype problem in extremal combinatorics is to study the structure of subgraphs appearing in different classes of (hyper)graphs. We will focus on such embedding problems in uniformly dense hypergraphs. In precise, we will mention the uniform Turan density of some hypergraphs.

  • Chong Shangguan (上官冲), The hat guessing number of graphs

    Room B332 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    Consider the following hat guessing game: $n$ players are placed on $n$ vertices of a graph, each wearing a hat whose color is arbitrarily chosen from a set of $q$ possible colors. Each player can see the hat colors of his neighbors, but not his own hat color. All of the players are asked to

  • Tuan Tran, Complexity of null dynamical systems

    Room B109 IBS (기초과학연구원)

    A theoretical dynamical system is a pair (X,T) where X is a compact metric space and T is a self homeomorphism of X. The topological entropy of a theoretical dynamical system (X,T), first introduced in 1965 by Adler, Konheim and McAndrew, is a nonnegative real number that measures the complexity of the system. Systems with positive