Colorings with only rainbow arithmetic progressions

J Pach, I Tomon - Acta Mathematica Hungarica, 2020 - Springer
Acta Mathematica Hungarica, 2020Springer
If we want to color 1, 2, ..., n 1, 2,…, n with the property that all 3-term arithmetic progressions
are rainbow (that is, their elements receive 3 distinct colors), then, obviously, we need to use
at least n/2 colors. Surprisingly, much fewer colors suffice if we are allowed to leave a
negligible proportion of integers uncolored. Specifically, we prove that there exist α, β< 1 α,
β< 1 such that for every n, there is a subset A of {1, 2, ..., n\} 1, 2,…, n of size at least nn^ α nn
α, the elements of which can be colored with n^ β n β colors with the property that every 3 …
Abstract
If we want to color with the property that all 3-term arithmetic progressions are rainbow (that is, their elements receive 3 distinct colors), then, obviously, we need to use at least n/2 colors. Surprisingly, much fewer colors suffice if we are allowed to leave a negligible proportion of integers uncolored. Specifically, we prove that there exist such that for every n, there is a subset A of of size at least , the elements of which can be colored with colors with the property that every 3-term arithmetic progression in A is rainbow. Moreover, can be chosen to be arbitrarily small. Our result can be easily extended to k-term arithmetic progressions for any .
As a corollary, we obtain a simple proof of the following result of Alon, Moitra, and Sudakov, which can be used to design efficient communication protocols over shared directional multi-channels. There exist such that for every n, there is a graph with n vertices and at least $$\left( {\begin{array}{c}n\\ 2\end{array}}\right) -n^{\alpha '}$$ edges, whose edge set can be partitioned into at most induced matchings.
Springer
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