This is a dublicate from stackexchange:
Consider two families of hyperplanes $F_1$ and $F_2$ in $\mathbb{R}^d$ both containing $n$ hyperplanes. We have that for all $f \in F_1$ and $g \in F_2$ that $f$ and $g$ intersect. Further we know that for each point $p \in \mathbb{R}^d$ we have that at most $c \cdot n$ hyperplanes from each family contain this point, $ c < 1$.
The second family induces $d-2$ dimensional planes on the hyperplanes of the first family. I want to show that there are at least $\epsilon \cdot n$ hyperplanes in the first family on which at least $\tau \cdot n$ planes are induced.
What I am able to show is: If there is a plane in which $k \cdot n$ hyperplanes form the second family intersect then, there this plane ist contained in at most $c \cdot n$ hyperplanes from the first family. Consider the $(1-c)n$ hyperplanes of the first family which do not contain the plane, than on each of them we get $k \cdot n$ induced planes.
On the other hand it is clear if at most a constant number, $k$, of hyperplanes intersect in one plane we get $\frac{n}{k}$ induced planes on each of the hyperplanes in the first family.
So somehow I can show the extremal cases but I'm stuck with the ones in between. Any help or suggestions?
Edit: Let $n_H$ denote the number of $d-2$ dimensional planes induced on the plane $H \in F_1$. Further let $f_{H,1},...,f_{H,n_H}$ denote this induced planes and $S(f_{H,i}):=\{K \in F_2 \mid f_{H,i} \subset K\}$. Then for $H, H' \in F_1$ we have:
\begin{equation} \frac{n}{d} = \sum_{i=1}^{n_H} \sum_{j=1}^{n_K} \vert S(f_{H,i}) \cap S(f_{H',j})\vert \leq c \cdot \frac{n}{d}+ n_{H} \cdot n_{H'} \end{equation}
Since $\vert S(f_{H,i}) \cap S(f_{H',j})\vert \leq 1$ for all $f_{H_i} \neq H \cap H'$ and $\vert S(f_{H,i}) \cap S(f_{H',j})\vert \leq c \cdot \frac{n}{d}$ if $f_{H,i} = f_{H',j}=H \cap H'$. Therefore $(1-c)\frac{n}{d} \leq n_{H'} \cdot n_H$. This holds for all $H, H' \in F_1$ so $n_H \gg \sqrt{n}$.