Abstract

The bipartite Ramsey number $b(s,t)$ is the smallest integer $n$ such that every blue-red edge coloring of $K_{n,n}$ contains either a blue $K_{s,s}$ or a red $K_{t,t}$. In the bipartite $K_{2,2}$-free process, we begin with an empty graph on vertex set $X\cup Y$, $|X|=|Y|=n$. At each step, a random edge from $X\times Y$ is added under the restriction that no $K_{2,2}$ is formed. This step is repeated until no more edges can be added. In this note, we analyze this process and prove that the resulting graph shows that $b(2,t) =\Omega(t^{3/2}/\log t)$, thereby improving the best known lower bound.

Highlights

  • The bipartite Ramsey number b(s, t) is the smallest integer n such that every blue-red edge coloring of Kn,n contains either a blue Ks,s or a red Kt,t

  • The main contribution of this paper is to prove that with high probability, GM has bipartite independence number at most Cn2/3 log2/3 n for some constant C

  • 2.3.1 Bounding AI we prove the following lemma which provides an upper bound on AI

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Summary

Introduction

The bipartite Ramsey number b(s, t) is the smallest integer n such that every blue-red edge coloring of Kn,n contains either a blue Ks,s or a red Kt,t. Have the most general results for the H-free process; they analyze the process and bound the electronic journal of combinatorics 27(4) (2020), #P4.23 the independence number of the resulting graph for a large class of graphs H including cycles of any length as well as cliques of any size (and all strictly 2-balanced graphs), establishing new lower bounds on Ramsey numbers R(H, Kt) where H is any fixed cycle or clique and t → ∞. Picollelli and Mubayi [7] studied the H-free process for certain hypergraphs H, resulting in new lower bounds for the corresponding hypergraph Ramsey numbers. The graph produced at the end of the bipartite K2,2-free process has bipartite independence number O(n2/3 log2/3 n). We prove Theorem 2, from which Theorem 1 follows trivially

Proof of Theorem 2
The Black Box
High degrees and dense subgraphs
Bipartite Independence Number
Final bound on bipartite independence number
Conclusion
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