arXiv:1302.3840 [math.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
On the Ramsey number of the triangle and the cube
Gonzalo Fiz Pontiveros, Simon Griffiths, Robert Morris, David Saxton, Jozef Skokan
Published 2013-02-15Version 1
The Ramsey number r(K_3,Q_n) is the smallest integer N such that every red-blue colouring of the edges of the complete graph K_N contains either a red n-dimensional hypercube, or a blue triangle. Almost thirty years ago, Burr and Erd\H{o}s conjectured that r(K_3,Q_n) = 2^{n+1} - 1 for every n \in \N, but the first non-trivial upper bound was obtained only recently, by Conlon, Fox, Lee and Sudakov, who proved that r(K_3,Q_n) \le 7000 \cdot 2^n. Here we show that r(K_3,Q_n) = (1 + o(1)) 2^{n+1} as n \to \infty.
Comments: 16 pages
Categories: math.CO
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