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Another Note on Intervals in the Hales-Jewett Theorem

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abstract

The Hales-Jewett Theorem states that any $r$-colouring of $[m]^n$ contains a monochromatic combinatorial line if $n$ is large enough. Shelah's proof of the theorem implies that for $m = 3$ there always exists a monochromatic combinatorial lines whose set of active coordinates is the union of at most $r$ intervals. Conlon and Kam\v{c}ev proved the existence of colourings for which it cannot be fewer than $r$ intervals if $r$ is odd. For $r = 2$ however, Leader and R\"aty showed that one can always find a monochromatic combinatorial line whose active coordinate set is a single interval. In this paper, we extend the result of Leader and R\"aty to the case of all even $r$, showing that one can always find a monochromatic combinatorial line in $[3]^n$ whose set of active coordinate is the union of at most $r-1$ intervals.

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math.CO 1

years

2019 1

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UNVERDICTED 1

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Linear orderings of combinatorial cubes

math.CO · 2019-06-27 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

Any linear ordering of [2]^n has a large subcube that is lexicographic; generalization bounds the number of possible orderings on subcubes of [k]^n by roughly (k-1)! / (2 (ln 2)^k).

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  • Linear orderings of combinatorial cubes math.CO · 2019-06-27 · unverdicted · none · ref 6 · internal anchor

    Any linear ordering of [2]^n has a large subcube that is lexicographic; generalization bounds the number of possible orderings on subcubes of [k]^n by roughly (k-1)! / (2 (ln 2)^k).