Spectral Methods in Extremal Combinatorics

Extremal combinatorics studies how large a collection of objects can be if it satisfies a given set of restrictions. Inspired by a classical theorem due to Erdos, Ko and Rado, Simonovits and Sos posed the following problem: determine how large a collection of graphs on the vertex set {1,...,n} can b...

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Main Author: Filmus, Yuval
Other Authors: Pitassi, Toniann
Language:en_ca
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43555
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-435552014-01-11T03:44:24ZSpectral Methods in Extremal CombinatoricsFilmus, Yuvalcombinatorics0984Extremal combinatorics studies how large a collection of objects can be if it satisfies a given set of restrictions. Inspired by a classical theorem due to Erdos, Ko and Rado, Simonovits and Sos posed the following problem: determine how large a collection of graphs on the vertex set {1,...,n} can be, if the intersection of any two of them contains a triangle. They conjectured that the largest possible collection, containing 1/8 of all graphs, consists of all graphs containing a fixed triangle (a triangle-star). The first major contribution of this thesis is a confirmation of this conjecture. We prove the Simonovits–Sos conjecture in the following strong form: the only triangle-intersecting families of measure at least 1/8 are triangle-stars (uniqueness), and every triangle-intersecting family of measure 1/8−e is O(e)-close to a triangle-star (stability). In order to prove the stability part of our theorem, we utilize a structure theorem for Boolean functions on {0,1}^m whose Fourier expansion is concentrated on the first t+1 levels, due to Kindler and Safra. The second major contribution of this thesis consists of two analogs of this theorem for Boolean functions on S_m whose Fourier expansion is concentrated on the first two levels. In the same way that the Kindler–Safra theorem is useful for studying triangle-intersecting families, our structure theorems are useful for studying intersecting families of permutations, which are families in which any two permutations agree on the image of at least one point. Using one of our theorems, we give a simple proof of the following result of Ellis, Friedgut and Pilpel: an intersecting family of permutations on S_m of size (1−e)(m−1)! is O(e)-close to a double coset, a family which consists of all permutations sending some point i to some point j.Pitassi, Toniann2013-112014-01-09T15:56:58ZNO_RESTRICTION2014-01-09T15:56:58Z2014-01-09Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/43555en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic combinatorics
0984
spellingShingle combinatorics
0984
Filmus, Yuval
Spectral Methods in Extremal Combinatorics
description Extremal combinatorics studies how large a collection of objects can be if it satisfies a given set of restrictions. Inspired by a classical theorem due to Erdos, Ko and Rado, Simonovits and Sos posed the following problem: determine how large a collection of graphs on the vertex set {1,...,n} can be, if the intersection of any two of them contains a triangle. They conjectured that the largest possible collection, containing 1/8 of all graphs, consists of all graphs containing a fixed triangle (a triangle-star). The first major contribution of this thesis is a confirmation of this conjecture. We prove the Simonovits–Sos conjecture in the following strong form: the only triangle-intersecting families of measure at least 1/8 are triangle-stars (uniqueness), and every triangle-intersecting family of measure 1/8−e is O(e)-close to a triangle-star (stability). In order to prove the stability part of our theorem, we utilize a structure theorem for Boolean functions on {0,1}^m whose Fourier expansion is concentrated on the first t+1 levels, due to Kindler and Safra. The second major contribution of this thesis consists of two analogs of this theorem for Boolean functions on S_m whose Fourier expansion is concentrated on the first two levels. In the same way that the Kindler–Safra theorem is useful for studying triangle-intersecting families, our structure theorems are useful for studying intersecting families of permutations, which are families in which any two permutations agree on the image of at least one point. Using one of our theorems, we give a simple proof of the following result of Ellis, Friedgut and Pilpel: an intersecting family of permutations on S_m of size (1−e)(m−1)! is O(e)-close to a double coset, a family which consists of all permutations sending some point i to some point j.
author2 Pitassi, Toniann
author_facet Pitassi, Toniann
Filmus, Yuval
author Filmus, Yuval
author_sort Filmus, Yuval
title Spectral Methods in Extremal Combinatorics
title_short Spectral Methods in Extremal Combinatorics
title_full Spectral Methods in Extremal Combinatorics
title_fullStr Spectral Methods in Extremal Combinatorics
title_full_unstemmed Spectral Methods in Extremal Combinatorics
title_sort spectral methods in extremal combinatorics
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43555
work_keys_str_mv AT filmusyuval spectralmethodsinextremalcombinatorics
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