A rainbow version of Mantel's Theorem
A rainbow version of Mantel's Theorem
Mantel's Theorem asserts that a simple $n$ vertex graph with more than $\frac{1}{4}n^2$ edges has a triangle (three mutually adjacent vertices). Here we consider a rainbow variant of this problem. We prove that whenever $G_1, G_2, G_3$ are simple graphs on a common set of $n$ vertices and $|E(G_i)| > ( \frac{ 26 - 2 \sqrt{7} }{81})n^2 \approx 0.2557 n^2$ for $1 \le i \le 3$, then there exist distinct vertices $v_1,v_2,v_3$ so that (working with the indices modulo 3) we have $v_i v_{i+1} \in E(G_i)$ for $1 \le i \le 3$. We provide an example to show this bound is best possible. This also answers a question of Diwan and Mubayi. We include a new short proof of Mantel's Theorem we obtained as a byproduct.
Sebasti¨¢n Gonz¨¢lez Hermosillo de la Maza、Amanda Montejano、Robert ?¨¢mal、Matt DeVos、Ron Aharoni
数学
Sebasti¨¢n Gonz¨¢lez Hermosillo de la Maza,Amanda Montejano,Robert ?¨¢mal,Matt DeVos,Ron Aharoni.A rainbow version of Mantel's Theorem[EB/OL].(2018-12-31)[2025-08-02].https://arxiv.org/abs/1812.11872.点此复制
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