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A New Lower Bound for the Diagonal Poset Ramsey Numbers

Maria-Romina Ivan, Bernardus Wessels

Abstract

Given two finite posets $\mathcal P$ and $\mathcal Q$, their Ramsey number, denoted by $R(\mathcal P,\mathcal Q)$, is defined to be the smallest integer $N$ such that any blue/red colouring of the vertices of the hypercube $Q_N$ has either a blue induced copy of $\mathcal P$, or a red induced copy of $\mathcal Q$. Axenovich and Walzer showed that, for fixed $\mathcal P$, $R(\mathcal P, Q_n)$ grows linearly with $n$. However, for the diagonal question, we do not even come close to knowing the order of growth of $R(Q_n,Q_n)$. The current upper bound is $R(Q_n,Q_n)\leq n^2-(1-o(1))n\log n$, due to Axenovich and Winter. What about lower bounds? It is trivial to see that $2n\leq R(Q_n,Q_n)$, but surprisingly, even an incremental improvement required significant work. Recently, an elegant probabilistic argument of Winter gave that, for large enough $n$, $R(Q_n,Q_n)\geq 2.02n$. In this paper we show that $R(Q_n,Q_n)\geq 2.7n+k$, where $k$ is a constant. Our current techniques might in principle show that in fact, for every $ε>0$, for large enough $n$, $R(Q_n,Q_n)\geq (3-ε)n$. Our methods exploit careful modifications of layered-colourings, for a large number of layers. These modifications are stronger than previous arguments as they are more constructive, rather than purely probabilistic.

A New Lower Bound for the Diagonal Poset Ramsey Numbers

Abstract

Given two finite posets and , their Ramsey number, denoted by , is defined to be the smallest integer such that any blue/red colouring of the vertices of the hypercube has either a blue induced copy of , or a red induced copy of . Axenovich and Walzer showed that, for fixed , grows linearly with . However, for the diagonal question, we do not even come close to knowing the order of growth of . The current upper bound is , due to Axenovich and Winter. What about lower bounds? It is trivial to see that , but surprisingly, even an incremental improvement required significant work. Recently, an elegant probabilistic argument of Winter gave that, for large enough , . In this paper we show that , where is a constant. Our current techniques might in principle show that in fact, for every , for large enough , . Our methods exploit careful modifications of layered-colourings, for a large number of layers. These modifications are stronger than previous arguments as they are more constructive, rather than purely probabilistic.
Paper Structure (5 sections, 8 theorems, 40 equations)

This paper contains 5 sections, 8 theorems, 40 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1

For $n$ large enough, there exists a constant $k$ such that $R(Q_n,Q_n)>2.7n+k$.

Theorems & Definitions (20)

  • Theorem 1
  • Theorem 2
  • Lemma 3: Axenovich-Walzer axenovichBooleanLatticesRamsey2017
  • proof
  • Lemma 4
  • Lemma 5
  • proof : Proof of Theorem \ref{['thm:qnqn_lower']}
  • Lemma 4
  • proof : Proof of Lemma \ref{['lem:pivot_points']}
  • Claim A
  • ...and 10 more