Skip to main content
Search type Search syntax
Tags [tag]
Exact "words here"
Author user:1234
user:me (yours)
Score score:3 (3+)
score:0 (none)
Answers answers:3 (3+)
answers:0 (none)
isaccepted:yes
hasaccepted:no
inquestion:1234
Views views:250
Code code:"if (foo != bar)"
Sections title:apples
body:"apples oranges"
URL url:"*.example.com"
Saves in:saves
Status closed:yes
duplicate:no
migrated:no
wiki:no
Types is:question
is:answer
Exclude -[tag]
-apples
For more details on advanced search visit our help page
Results tagged with
Search options not deleted user 34180

Enumerative combinatorics, graph theory, order theory, posets, matroids, designs and other discrete structures. It also includes algebraic, analytic and probabilistic combinatorics.

2 votes

Are bipartite Moore graphs Hamiltonian?

This recent paper of Sato and Suzuki shows that the graphs corresponding to some classical generalized quadrangles are indeed Hamiltonian: Sato, H. & Suzuki, H. Graphs and Combinatorics (2018). http …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
3 votes

Blocking sets in three dimensional finite affine spaces

Here is an improvement of the upper bound which I found in ``The polynomial method in Galois geometries'' by Simeon Ball. See page number 4. The known constructions are somewhat crude. For exampl …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
11 votes
2 answers
781 views

Blocking sets in three dimensional finite affine spaces

What is the smallest possible size of a set of points in $\mathbb{F}_q^3$ which intersects (blocks) every line? Clearly the union of three affine hyperplanes that intersect in a singleton, say $x = 0 …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
5 votes
Accepted

$(n-2)$-blocking sets in $AG(n,2)$

Not much is known for the general case. Let $m(k, n, q)$ denote the minimum size of an $k$-blocking set in $AG(n, q)$. Trivially we have $m(0, n, q) = q^n$ and $m(n, n, q) = 1$. By Jamison/Brouwer-S …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
5 votes

Can Schwartz-Zippel be formulated for commutative rings instead of fields?

See Section 4 in "On Zeros of a Polynomial in a Finite Grid" to see how Schwartz-Zippel lemma and many similar results on zeros of polynomials work for arbitrary commutative rings as long as the "grid …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
11 votes

Important formulas in combinatorics

The Kneser graph $KG_{n,k}$ is the graph on $k$-subsets of $\{1, \dots, n\}$ with two subsets made adjacent when they are disjoint. The formula $$\chi(KG_{n,k}) = n - 2k + 2$$ was proved by Lovász in …
2 votes

Covering all, but $k$ points with affine subspaces

Here are some partial answers to your question. Let $A = A_1 \times \dots \times A_n \subseteq F^n$ be a finite grid. Alon and Furedi proved that you need at least $\sum (\# A - 1)$ hyperplanes to …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
14 votes
1 answer
797 views

Theorems proved using combinatorial nullstellensatz that have no other known proof

Alon's (or Alon and Tarsi's?) combinatorial nullstellensatz is a powerful algebraic tool with many applications in combinatorics and number theory. See this, this, this and this mathoverflow question. …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
9 votes
Accepted

The most number of points that realize only $k$ distinct distances

Bannai, Bannai and Stanton proved that $f_d(k) \leq {d + k \choose k}$ in 1983. See: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2FBF02579288 I don't think this bound has been improved in general. It is …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
4 votes

Linear algebra proofs in combinatorics?

Here are some examples where the dimension of a vector space of polynomials is used to solve a combinatorial problem. Theorem 1 There are at most $n(n+1)/2$ equiangular lines in $\mathbb{R}^n$. Proof. …
10 votes

How to recognise that the polynomial method might work

I would like to add some more examples and references for the so called polynomial method that can help us recognise when it can be applied. From what I understand so far, the polynomial method fall …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
3 votes

On MDS code property

It has been proved by Simeon Ball that for $k \leq p$, all $[n, k, n-k+1]_q$ codes are Reed-Solomon codes, where $q = p^h$. See Corollary 9.2 in the following paper: Ball, S. On sets of vectors of a …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
5 votes

Combinatorial databases

Andries Brouwer's collection of strongly regular graphs: http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/graphs/srg/srgtab.html Eric Moorhouse's collections of finite projective planes and generalized polygons: http://eri …
6 votes
1 answer
454 views

Applications of small Kakeya sets over finite fields

It was proved by Dvir that a Kakeya set in $\mathbb{F}_q^n$ has size at least $q^n/n!$, a bound which was later improved to $q^n/2^n$. For $n = 2$ and $q$ odd the exact bound is $q(q+1)/2 + (q-1)/2$ …
Anurag's user avatar
  • 1,197
4 votes

What are the applications of hypergraphs?

Every finite geometry (projective planes, generalized polygons, polar spaces, near polygons, etc.) and every block design (Witt design, difference sets, Steiner triple systems, etc.) is a hypergraph. …

15 30 50 per page