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For $ngeq s> rgeq 1$ and $kgeq 2$, write $n rightarrow (s)_{k}^r$ if every hyperedge colouring with $k$ colours of the complete $r$-uniform hypergraph on $n$ vertices has a monochromatic subset of size $s$. Improving upon previous results by textcite{AGLM14} and textcite{EHMR84} we show that [ text{if } r geq 3 text{ and } n rightarrow (s)_k^r text{ then } 2^n rightarrow (s+1)_{k+3}^{r+1}. ] This yields an improvement for some of the known lower bounds on multicolour hypergraph Ramsey numbers. Given a hypergraph $H=(V,E)$, we consider the Ramsey-like problem of colouring all $r$-subsets of $V$ such that no hyperedge of size $geq r+1$ is monochromatic. We provide upper and lower bounds on the number of colours necessary in terms of the chromatic number $chi(H)$. In particular we show that this number is $O(log^{(r-1)} (r chi(H)) + r)$.
We prove new upper bounds on the multicolour Ramsey numbers of paths and even cycles. It is well known that $(k-1)n+o(n)leq R_k(P_n)leq R_k(C_n)leq kn+o(n)$. The upper bound was recently improved by Sarkozy who showed that $R_k(C_n)leqleft(k-frac{k}{
A set of vertices $Xsubseteq V$ in a simple graph $G(V,E)$ is irredundant if each vertex $xin X$ is either isolated in the induced subgraph $langle Xrangle$ or else has a private neighbor $yin Vsetminus X$ that is adjacent to $x$ and to no other vert
In this paper, we consider a variant of Ramsey numbers which we call complementary Ramsey numbers $bar{R}(m,t,s)$. We first establish their connections to pairs of Ramsey $(s,t)$-graphs. Using the classification of Ramsey $(s,t)$-graphs for small $s,
For a fixed set of positive integers $R$, we say $mathcal{H}$ is an $R$-uniform hypergraph, or $R$-graph, if the cardinality of each edge belongs to $R$. An $R$-graph $mathcal{H}$ is emph{covering} if every vertex pair of $mathcal{H}$ is contained in
Given a positive integer $s$, a graph $G$ is $s$-Ramsey for a graph $H$, denoted $Grightarrow (H)_s$, if every $s$-colouring of the edges of $G$ contains a monochromatic copy of $H$. The $s$-colour size-Ramsey number ${hat{r}}_s(H)$ of a graph $H$ is