Lower and Upper Bounds for Small Canonical and Ordered Ramsey Numbers
Daniel Brosch, Bernard Lidick\'y, Sydney Miyasaki, Diane Puges

TL;DR
This paper explores bounds for small canonical and ordered Ramsey numbers across different combinatorial settings, using computational methods to determine exact values and bounds for various small graphs.
Contribution
It introduces new bounds and exact values for small ordered and canonical Ramsey numbers, employing computational techniques like tabu search, integer programming, and flag algebras.
Findings
Determined R(6,3)=26 and R(3,5)=13.
Established R(G) for all graphs G on up to four vertices except K4^-.
Computed ER(P4) for all orderings of P4.
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate three extensions of Ramsey numbers to other combinatorial settings. We first consider ordered Ramsey numbers. Here, we ask for a monochromatic copy of a linearly ordered graph in every -edge-coloring of a linearly ordered complete graph . The smallest such is denoted by . Next, we study canonical Ramsey numbers. A canonical coloring of a linearly ordered graph is an edge-coloring in which is monochromatic, rainbow, or min/max-lexicographic. In the latter case, each pair of edges receives the same color if and only if they share the same first (respectively, second) vertex. Erd\H{o}s and Rado showed that for every there exists such that every edge-coloring of a linearly ordered contains a canonical copy of ; the smallest such is denoted by . Finally, we examine unordered canonical Ramsey…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsLimits and Structures in Graph Theory · Advanced Topology and Set Theory · Advanced Graph Theory Research
