On Sets of Monochromatic Objects in Bicolored Point Sets
Abstract
Let P be a set of n points in the plane, not all on a line, each colored red or blue. The classical Motzkin--Rabin theorem guarantees the existence of a monochromatic line. Motivated by the seminal work of Green and Tao (2013) on the Sylvester-Gallai theorem, we investigate the quantitative and structural properties of monochromatic geometric objects, such as lines, circles, and conics. We first show that if no line contains more than three points, then for all sufficiently large n there are at least n2/24 - O(1) monochromatic lines. We then show a converse of a theorem of Jamison (1986): Given n 6 blue points and n red points, if the blue points lie on a conic and every line through two blue points contains a red point, then all red points are collinear. We also settle the smallest nontrivial case of a conjecture of Mili\'cevi\'c (2018) by showing that if we have 5 blue points with no three collinear and 5 red points, if the blue points lie on a conic and every line through two blue points contains a red point, then all 10 points lie on a cubic curve. Further, we analyze the random setting and show that, for any non-collinear set of n 10 points independently colored red or blue, the expected number of monochromatic lines is minimized by the near-pencil configuration. Finally, we examine monochromatic circles and conics, and exhibit several natural families in which no such monochromatic objects exist.
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