Anti-Ramsey Multiplicities

Abstract

The Ramsey multiplicity constant of a graph H is the minimum proportion of copies of H in the complete graph which are monochromatic under an edge-coloring of Kn as n goes to infinity. Graphs for which this minimum is asymptotically achieved by taking a random coloring are called common, and common graphs have been studied extensively, leading to the Burr-Rosta conjecture and Sidorenko's conjecture. Erdos and S\'os asked what the maximum number of rainbow triangles is in a 3-coloring of the edge set of Kn, a rainbow version of the Ramsey multiplicity question. A graph H is called r-anti-common if the maximum proportion of rainbow copies of H in any r-coloring of E(Kn) is asymptotically achieved by taking a random coloring. In this paper, we investigate anti-Ramsey multiplicity for several families of graphs. We determine classes of graphs which are either anti-common or not. Some of these classes follow the same behavior as the monochromatic case, but some of them do not. In particular the rainbow equivalent of Sidorenko's conjecture, that all bipartite graphs are anti-common, is false.

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