Publication | Open Access
Use of MAX-CUT for Ramsey Arrowing of Triangles
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Citations
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References
2012
Year
Mathematical ProgrammingGraph MinorEngineeringGraph TheoryRelated GraphExtremal Graph TheoryStructural Graph TheoryPlanar GraphComputational ComplexityExtremal CombinatoricsComputer ScienceDiscrete MathematicsFolkman GraphCombinatorial OptimizationComputational GeometryApproximation TechniqueRamsey Arrowing
In 1967, Erdős and Hajnal asked the question: Does there exist a $K_4$-free graph that is not the union of two triangle-free graphs? Finding such a graph involves solving a special case of the classical Ramsey arrowing operation. Folkman proved the existence of these graphs in 1970, and they are now called Folkman graphs. Erdős offered \$100 for deciding if one exists with less than $10^{10}$ vertices. This problem remained open until 1988 when Spencer, in a seminal paper using probabilistic techniques, proved the existence of a Folkman graph of order $3\times 10^9$ (after an erratum), without explicitly constructing it. In 2008, Dudek and Rödl developed a strategy to construct new Folkman graphs by approximating the maximum cut of a related graph, and used it to improve the upper bound to 941. We improve this bound first to 860 using their approximation technique and then further to 786 with the MAX-CUT semidefinite programming relaxation as used in the Goemans-Williamson algorithm.
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