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Neighborly boxes and bipartite coverings; constructions and conjectures

Jarosław Grytczuk, Andrzej P. Kisielewicz, Krzysztof Przesławski

Abstract

Two axis-aligned boxes in $\mathbb{R}^d$ are \emph{$k$-neighborly} if their intersection has dimension at least $d-k$ and at most $d-1$. The maximum number of pairwise $k$-neighborly boxes in $\mathbb{R}^d$ is denoted by $n(k,d)$. It is known that $n(k,d)=Θ(d^k)$, for fixed $1\leqslant k\leqslant d$, but exact formulas are known only in three cases: $k=1$, $k=d-1$, and $k=d$. In particular, the formula $n(1,d)=d+1$ is equivalent to the famous theorem of Graham and Pollak on bipartite partitions of cliques. In this paper we are dealing with the case $k=2$. We give a new construction of $k$-neighborly \emph{codes} giving better lower bounds on $n(2,d)$. The construction is recursive in nature and uses a kind of ``algebra'' on \emph{lists} of ternary strings, which encode neighborly boxes in a familiar way. Moreover, we conjecture that our construction is optimal and gives an explicit formula for $n(2,d)$. This supposition is supported by some numerical experiments and some partial results on related open problems which are recalled.

Neighborly boxes and bipartite coverings; constructions and conjectures

Abstract

Two axis-aligned boxes in are \emph{-neighborly} if their intersection has dimension at least and at most . The maximum number of pairwise -neighborly boxes in is denoted by . It is known that , for fixed , but exact formulas are known only in three cases: , , and . In particular, the formula is equivalent to the famous theorem of Graham and Pollak on bipartite partitions of cliques. In this paper we are dealing with the case . We give a new construction of -neighborly \emph{codes} giving better lower bounds on . The construction is recursive in nature and uses a kind of ``algebra'' on \emph{lists} of ternary strings, which encode neighborly boxes in a familiar way. Moreover, we conjecture that our construction is optimal and gives an explicit formula for . This supposition is supported by some numerical experiments and some partial results on related open problems which are recalled.
Paper Structure (15 sections, 21 theorems, 48 equations, 3 figures, 2 tables)

This paper contains 15 sections, 21 theorems, 48 equations, 3 figures, 2 tables.

Key Result

Theorem 1

The maximum number of pairwise neighborly boxes in $\mathbb{R}^d$ equals $d+1$.

Figures (3)

  • Figure 1: Four pairwise neighborly boxes in $\mathbb{R}^3$, the corresponding neighborly code, and a bipartite clique partition.
  • Figure 2: Heat maps.
  • Figure 3: The splitting game producing a maximal $2$-neighborly code (in blue boxes).

Theorems & Definitions (30)

  • Theorem 1: Zaks, Zaks3
  • Conjecture 1
  • Conjecture 2
  • Theorem 2: Zaks, Zaks3
  • Theorem 3: Graham and Pollak, GP
  • Proposition 1: Alon, Alon
  • Theorem 4
  • Conjecture 3
  • Theorem 5
  • Conjecture 4
  • ...and 20 more