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Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity for rainbow small trees

Xueliang Li, Yuan Si

Abstract

Let $G, H$ be two non-empty graphs and $k$ be a positive integer. The Gallai-Ramsey number $\operatorname{gr}_k(G:H)$ is defined as the minimum positive integer $N$ such that for all $n\geq N$, every $k$-edge-coloring of $K_n$ contains either a rainbow subgraph $G$ or a monochromatic subgraph $H$. The Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity $\operatorname{GM}_k(G:H)$ is defined as the minimum total number of rainbow subgraphs $G$ and monochromatic subgraphs $H$ for all $k$-edge-colored $K_{\operatorname{gr}_k(G:H)}$. In this paper, we get some exact values of the Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity for rainbow small trees versus general monochromatic graphs under a sufficiently large number of colors. We also study the bipartite Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity.

Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity for rainbow small trees

Abstract

Let be two non-empty graphs and be a positive integer. The Gallai-Ramsey number is defined as the minimum positive integer such that for all , every -edge-coloring of contains either a rainbow subgraph or a monochromatic subgraph . The Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity is defined as the minimum total number of rainbow subgraphs and monochromatic subgraphs for all -edge-colored . In this paper, we get some exact values of the Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity for rainbow small trees versus general monochromatic graphs under a sufficiently large number of colors. We also study the bipartite Gallai-Ramsey multiplicity.
Paper Structure (13 sections, 45 theorems, 100 equations, 2 tables)

This paper contains 13 sections, 45 theorems, 100 equations, 2 tables.

Key Result

Theorem 1.5

ThomasonWagner2007 For an integer $n\geq 4$, let $K_n$ be an edge-colored complete graph with at least three colors so that it contains no rainbow $P_4$ if and only if $n=4$ and three colors are used, each color forming a perfect matching.

Theorems & Definitions (72)

  • Definition 1.1
  • Definition 1.2
  • Conjecture 1
  • Definition 1.3
  • Definition 1.4
  • Theorem 1.5
  • Theorem 1.6
  • Theorem 1.7
  • Theorem 1.8
  • Theorem 1.9
  • ...and 62 more