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In
combinatorics Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and an end in obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many appl ...
, a branch of
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, partition regularity is one notion of largeness for a
collection Collection or Collections may refer to: * Cash collection, the function of an accounts receivable department * Collection (church), money donated by the congregation during a church service * Collection agency, agency to collect cash * Collectio ...
of sets. Given a set X, a collection of subsets \mathbb \subset \mathcal(X) is called ''partition regular'' if every set ''A'' in the collection has the property that, no matter how ''A'' is partitioned into finitely many subsets, at least one of the subsets will also belong to the collection. That is, for any A \in \mathbb, and any finite partition A = C_1 \cup C_2 \cup \cdots \cup C_n, there exists an ''i'' ≤ ''n'', such that C_i belongs to \mathbb.
Ramsey theory Ramsey theory, named after the British mathematician and philosopher Frank P. Ramsey, is a branch of mathematics that focuses on the appearance of order in a substructure given a structure of a known size. Problems in Ramsey theory typically ask a ...
is sometimes characterized as the study of which collections \mathbb are partition regular.


Examples

* the collection of all infinite subsets of an infinite set ''X'' is a prototypical example. In this case partition regularity asserts that every finite partition of an infinite set has an infinite cell (i.e. the infinite
pigeonhole principle In mathematics, the pigeonhole principle states that if items are put into containers, with , then at least one container must contain more than one item. For example, if one has three gloves (and none is ambidextrous/reversible), then there mu ...
.) * sets with positive upper density in \mathbb: the ''
upper density In number theory, natural density (also referred to as asymptotic density or arithmetic density) is one method to measure how "large" a subset of the set of natural numbers is. It relies chiefly on the probability of encountering members of the de ...
'' \overline(A) of A \subset \mathbb is defined as \overline(A) = \limsup_ \frac. (
Szemerédi's theorem In arithmetic combinatorics, Szemerédi's theorem is a result concerning arithmetic progressions in subsets of the integers. In 1936, Erdős and Turán conjectured that every set of integers ''A'' with positive natural density contains a ''k''-ter ...
) * For any
ultrafilter In the mathematical field of order theory, an ultrafilter on a given partially ordered set (or "poset") P is a certain subset of P, namely a maximal filter on P; that is, a proper filter on P that cannot be enlarged to a bigger proper filter on ...
\mathbb on a set X, \mathbb is partition regular: for any A \in \mathbb, if A = C_1 \sqcup \cdots \sqcup C_n, then exactly one C_i \in \mathbb. * sets of recurrence: a set R of integers is called a ''set of recurrence'' if for any measure preserving transformation T of the probability space (Ω, β, μ) and A \in\ \beta of positive measure there is a nonzero n \in R so that \mu(A \cap T^A) > 0. * Call a subset of natural numbers ''a.p.-rich'' if it contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions. Then the collection of a.p.-rich subsets is partition regular (
Van der Waerden Bartel Leendert van der Waerden (; 2 February 1903 – 12 January 1996) was a Dutch mathematician and historian of mathematics. Biography Education and early career Van der Waerden learned advanced mathematics at the University of Amsterd ...
, 1927). * Let n be the set of all ''n''-subsets of A \subset \mathbb. Let \mathbb^n = \bigcup^_ n. For each n, \mathbb^n is partition regular. (
Ramsey Ramsey may refer to: Geography British Isles * Ramsey, Cambridgeshire, a small market town in England * Ramsey, Essex, a village near Harwich, England ** Ramsey and Parkeston, a civil parish formerly called just "Ramsey" * Ramsey, Isle of Man, t ...
, 1930). * For each infinite cardinal \kappa, the collection of
stationary set In mathematics, specifically set theory and model theory, a stationary set is a set that is not too small in the sense that it intersects all club sets, and is analogous to a set of non-zero measure in measure theory. There are at least three close ...
s of \kappa is partition regular. More is true: if S is stationary and S=\bigcup_ S_ for some \lambda < \kappa , then some S_ is stationary. * the collection of \Delta-sets: A \subset \mathbb is a \Delta-set if A contains the set of differences \ for some sequence \langle s_n \rangle^\omega_. * the set of barriers on \mathbb: call a collection \mathbb of finite subsets of \mathbb a ''barrier'' if: ** \forall X,Y \in \mathbb, X \not\subset Y and ** for all infinite I \subset \cup \mathbb, there is some X \in \mathbb such that the elements of X are the smallest elements of I; ''i.e.'' X \subset I and \forall i \in I \setminus X, \forall x \in X, x. : This generalizes
Ramsey's theorem In combinatorics, Ramsey's theorem, in one of its graph-theoretic forms, states that one will find monochromatic cliques in any edge labelling (with colours) of a sufficiently large complete graph. To demonstrate the theorem for two colours (say ...
, as each n is a barrier. ( Nash-Williams, 1965) * finite products of infinite trees ( Halpern–Läuchli, 1966) * piecewise syndetic sets (Brown, 1968) * Call a subset of natural numbers ''i.p.-rich'' if it contains arbitrarily large finite sets together with all their finite sums. Then the collection of i.p.-rich subsets is partition regular ( FolkmanRado–Sanders, 1968). * (''m'', ''p'', ''c'')-sets (Deuber, 1973) *
IP set In mathematics, an IP set is a set of natural numbers which contains all finite sums of some infinite set. The finite sums of a set ''D'' of natural numbers are all those numbers that can be obtained by adding up the elements of some finite nonem ...
s (Hindman, 1974, see also Hindman, Strauss, 1998) * MT''k'' sets for each ''k'', ''i.e.'' ''k''-tuples of finite sums (Milliken–Taylor, 1975) * central sets; ''i.e.'' the members of any minimal idempotent in \beta\mathbb, the
Stone–Čech compactification In the mathematical discipline of general topology, Stone–Čech compactification (or Čech–Stone compactification) is a technique for constructing a universal map from a topological space ''X'' to a compact Hausdorff space ''βX''. The Stone ...
of the integers. (Furstenberg, 1981, see also Hindman, Strauss, 1998)


Diophantine equations

A
Diophantine equation In mathematics, a Diophantine equation is an equation, typically a polynomial equation in two or more unknowns with integer coefficients, such that the only solutions of interest are the integer ones. A linear Diophantine equation equates to a c ...
P(\mathbf) = 0 is called ''partition regular'' if the collection of all infinite subsets of \N containing a solution is partition regular. Rado's theorem characterises exactly which ''systems'' of ''linear'' Diophantine equations \mathbf\mathbf = \mathbf are partition regular. Much progress has been made recently on classifying nonlinear Diophantine equations.{{Cite journal, last=Barrett, first=Jordan Mitchell, last2=Lupini, first2=Martino, last3=Moreira, first3=Joel, date=May 2021, title=On Rado conditions for nonlinear Diophantine equations, url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejc.2020.103277, journal=European Journal of Combinatorics, volume=94, pages=103277, doi=10.1016/j.ejc.2020.103277, issn=0195-6698, arxiv=1907.06163


References


Sources

#
Vitaly Bergelson Vitaly Bergelson (born 1950 in Kiev) is a mathematical researcher and professor at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. His research focuses on ergodic theory and combinatorics. Bergelson received his Ph.D in 1984 under Hillel Furstenberg ...
, N. Hindma
Partition regular structures contained in large sets are abundant
''J. Comb. Theory A'' 93 (2001), 18–36. # T. Brown
An interesting combinatorial method in the theory of locally finite semigroups
''Pacific J. Math.'' 36, no. 2 (1971), 285–289. # W. Deuber, Mathematische Zeitschrift 133, (1973) 109–123 # N. Hindman, Finite sums from sequences within cells of a partition of ''N'', ''J. Comb. Theory A'' 17 (1974) 1–11. # C.St.J.A. Nash-Williams, On well-quasi-ordering transfinite sequences, ''Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc.'' 61 (1965), 33–39. # N. Hindman, D. Strauss, Algebra in the Stone–Čech compactification, De Gruyter, 1998 # J.Sanders, A Generalization of Schur's Theorem, Doctoral Dissertation, Yale University, 1968. Ramsey theory Families of sets