Towards extending the Ahlswede-Khachatrian theorem to cross t-intersecting families
Abstract
Ahlswede and Khachatrian's diametric theorem is a weighted version of their complete intersection theorem, itself an extension of the t-intersecting Erdos-Ko-Rado theorem. Their intersection theorem says that the maximum size of a family of subsets of [n] = \1, …, n\, every pair of which intersects in at least t elements, is the size of certain trivially intersecting families proposed by Frankl. We address a cross intersecting version of their diametric theorem. Two families A and B of subsets of [n] are cross t-intersecting if for every A ∈ A and B ∈ B, A and B intersect in at least t elements. The p-weight of a k element subset A of [n] is pk(1-p)n-k, and the weight of a family A is the sum of the weights of its sets. The weight of a pair of families is the product of the weights of the families. The maximum p-weight of a t-intersecting family depends on the value of p. Ahlswede and Khachatrian showed that for p in the range [rt + 2r - 1, r+1t + 2r + 1], the maximum p-weight of a t-intersecting family is that of the family Ftr consisting of all subsets of [n] containing at least t+r elements of the set [t+2r]. In a previous paper we showed a cross t-intersecting version of this for large t in the case that r = 0. In this paper, we do the same in the case that r = 1. We show that for p in the range [1t + 1, 2t + 3] the maximum p-weight of a cross t-intersecting pair of families, for t ≥ 200, is achieved when both families are Ft1. Further, we show that except at the endpoints of this range, this is, up to isomorphism, the only pair of t-intersecting families achieving this weight.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.