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...MATH 115 SECOND MIDTERM
November 18, 2008
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...MATH 115 FINAL EXAM
April 25, 2005
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...Math 115 Final Exam
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...MATH 115 FIRST MIDTERM
February 10, 2009
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COMBINATORIAL JOURNALOF THEORY, Series A 32,241-251 (1982) Minimal Decompositions Mutually Isomorphic F. R. K. of Hypergraphs Subhypergraphs CHUNG into Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974 P. ERD~S Mathematics Institute of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary AND R. L. GRAHAM Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974 Received March 23, 1981 DEDICATED THE TO PROFESSOR OCCASION OF MARSHALL HALL, JR., ON HIS RETIREMENT INTRODUCTION By an r-uniform hypergraph (or r-graph, for short) H = (V, E) we mean a collection E = E(H) = {E, ,..., E,] of r-element subsets (called edges) of a set V = V(H), called the vertices of H. Let 3 = {HI,..., Hk} be a family of rgraphs, each having the same number of edges. By a U-decomposition of 8 we mean a set of partitions of the edge sets E(H,) of the H,, say E(H,) = CL Et,,, such that for each j, all the E,,, are isomorphic (as hypergraphs). Such decompositions always exist since (by our assumptions) we can always take all the E,, to be single edges. Let us define the quantity U(X) as the least possible value of t a Udecomposition of Z can have. Finally, we let U,(n, r) denote the largest possible value U(Z) can assume as Z ranges over all families of k r-graphs, each having n vertices and the same (unspecified) number of edges. For the value r = 2, r-graphs are just ordinary graphs and in this case, the 241 0097.3165/82/020241-11$02.00/0 Copyright 0 1982 by Academic Press, Inc. All rights of reproduction in any form reserved. 242 CHUNG,ERDb,ANDGRAHAM functions U&r, 2) = U,(n) have been investigated extensively by the authors and others in [ 1,2]. In particular, it is known that U*(n) = $I + o(n), and U,(n) = $n + Ok@), k>3. In this paper we continue this study to the much more complex case of I > 2. Our basic results are the following (where c, , c2 ,,.., denote appropriate positive constants): c, n413 loglog n/log n < U,(n; 3) < czn4 3; (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) for any E > 0, ~,n~-~/~-( ( U,(n; 3) < c4n2- /k; for r even; for r odd; for t-23. c5n 12 < U,(n; r) < c6nrf2 c,n( - )2/(= -1) < u2(n; r) < Cgnr/2 n r- -rlk < u,(~; r) < ,,-1-W PRELIMINARIES We first prove several auxiliary lemmas. Suppose 2 = (H, ,..., Hk}, where each Hi is an r-graph having n vertices and e edges. Let us denote by c(R) the maximum number of edges in any hypergraph H occurring in all the Hi as a common subhypergraph. LEMMA 1. Proof: Let Q, denote the set of all one-to-one mappings of V(Hi) into V(H,). For Ai E a,, e, E E(G,), 1 Q i < k, define I A,....,& (e 1,..., ek) = 1 =o ifAimapseiontoe,, otherwise, DECOMPOSITIONS OF HYPERGRAPHS 243 where we say that 1, maps e, onto e, if e, = U,,,,&(x). Consider the sum = C (r!(n - r)!)k-l = ek(r!(n - r)!)k-l. e,EEw,) ek E(Hk) Since IJ?,~ = n! for all i then for some choice of 1, E 02,..., 1, E Ok, s 2,...,1k(eI elsE(H,) ~..-~ ek> > -= (n!) - ek k-l * e,@(ffk) Consequently, the xi, 2 < i < k, determine a subhypergranh H common to all of the H, which has at least ek/( ,)k- edges. 1 2. Let H be an r-graph with IE(H)J > rub + 1. Suppose deg v = 1 E E(H): v E e)l < a for all vertices v E V(H). Then H contains b disjoint (e edges. LEMMA Proof. Suppose F is a maximal set of disjoint edges. If JF( < b, the number of edges containing some element of F must be at most IFl ar < IE(H)I, contradicting the maximality of F. m LEMMA 3. Zf r=3, ProoJ It suffices to prove there is a star with t = [ml edges contained in each H,. By a star S we mean a collection of edges e, such that for some point X, e, n e, = {x} for all i # j. Suppose H has n vertices and e edges and does not contain S. Consider the set P of disjoint pairs of vertices of V(H) defined as follows: (i) Select v, with deg,(v,) > deg,(v) for any v E V(H). Let v: be a vertex in Hx, of maximum degree and define P, = ( vl, v:) (where, for x E V(H), H, denotes the ordinary (2-) graph with edge set {( y, z): tx, Y, 21 E E(H)}). (ii) Suppose now that P,,..., P, have been defined. We form Pi+, as follows. Choose vi+i so that: (a) vi+, @Pi for 1 <j< i; 244 CHUNG,ERD6S,ANDGRAHAM @b>vI+r has maximum V(H) - Xi, where degree in the subhypergraph induced on x,= (j Pi* j=l Let t$+, be the vertex the graph HO)+, -Xi having maximum degree at least one in If,,+,. Define Pi+l E {vi+r, v; +r }. We continue this process as long as possible. The final set of pairs P is defined to be ui>, Pi. Let d, denote the degree of vi in the hypergraph induced in V(H) -Xi (with X0 taken to be 0). Since H does not contain a copy of S, we have [{FE E(H): Pi s P)I > di/2t for all i > 1. Let d: denote the degree of UT in the hypergraph induced on V(H) -Xi-, - (vi}. Then di > d: and xi (di + d,*) 2 e. Therefore, xi d, 2 42. Now, for any v E V(H), define a(v) by a(u) z j{ZE V(H): Z= {u) UPi for some i)l. Thus, x a(u) > C I(PE E(H): Pi E a)1 D i 2 1 d,/2t > eJ4t. (6) However, the assumption that S !?A implies a(u) < t - 1. Therefore, by (6) Z-Z (t - 1)n >/ e/4& which clearly contradicts the hypothesis that t C &/% In a similar way we can prove the following. LEMMA fl 4. Let GY be a family of r-graphs, each with e edges. Then where c is a constant depending on k. DECOMPOSITIONS OFHYPERGRAPHS 245 BOUNDS ON Uz(n; 3) The main result of this section is the following. THEOREM 1. c, n4 3 loglog n/log n < u&r; 3) < c*?P. Proof: We first prove the upper bound. Let G, and G, be two 3-graphs, each with n vertices and e edges. We will successively remove isomorphic subgraphs H from the G,, thereby decreasing the number e of edges currently remaining in each of the original graphs. The subgraph H= H(e) removed will depend on the current value of e. We distinguish two ranges for e. (i) e > n5j3. In this case we repeatedly remove a common subgraph H(e) having at least e /( : ) edges. The existence of such an H(e) is guaranteed by Lemma 1. If e, denotes the number of edges remaining in each hypergraph after i such subgraphs have been removed then (7) (xi+, < ai - at. Since a, ( 1 and i- -i-* ( (i + l)) , it follows by induction that ai < i- for all i. Thus, after n 4 3 steps, the remaining gr a p hs have at most n513 edges. (ii) e < n5j3 . For this range, we repeatedly apply Lemma 3. Let e, denote the number of edges each graph has at the beginning of this process. In general, if e, denotes the number of edges remaining after i applications of Lemma 3, then ei+,<ei2/ -$-. (8) Setting ai = 5e,n, we have ai+, Q ai - &. Suppose ai < (fi n4 3 - i/2)* By hypothesis, a, < 5ns/3. for some i > 0. Then, ai+, Q (fin4j3 Q (fin4 - i/Z)* - 6 - (i + 1)/2)*. n4j3 + i/2 246 CHUNG, ERDijS, AND GRAHAM Therefore, after at most 2 fin 4 3 steps, all edges in each graph will have been removed. Since, the total number of steps required in (i) and (ii) is at most (2 fi+ 1) n 4f3 then we have proved U&l; 3) < c* rF3 as required. The lower bound is obtained by proving the existence of two hypergraphs G, and G, with cn 5 3 edges with the prop ert y that any common subgraph has at most c n I3 log n/log log n edges. Let G, consist of the disjoint union of n213 copies of complete 3-graphs on n I3 vertices. We remark here that although n213 and n1 3 may not be integers, such statements are always made with the implicit understanding that the hypergraphs (and quantities) involved may have to be adjusted slightly by adding or deleting (asymptotically) trivial subgraphs (and amounts) so as to make stated inequalities true. G, will be a 3-graph having the following properties: (a) There a is point V, such that v, E @for all @E E(G,); (b) Consider the ordinary (2-) graph G with V(G ) = (v,,..., v,} and E(G ) = {F- {II,}: 5E E(G,)}. Then G has ( :/ ) n213 edges. (c) Any induced subgraph of G on n 13 points has at most n113log n/loglog n edges. The existence of such a G, follows from the following probability argument. Consider the set jr of all ordinary (2-) graphs with n vertices and e = ( 3 n213edges. A grap h F E F is said to be bad if there exists a set of n 1 3 points such that the induced subgraph on these vertices has at least n 13 log n/loglog n edges. The number of such bad graphs FE ST is bounded above by n *I3 (2 - n113log n/loglog n A= n nl/3 n 13 log n/loglog n )( e - n1j3 log n/loglog n * ( )( A straightforward calculation shows log n/loglogn PI / n*/3 n5/3 -A < 1. (;) Q .I:,, i n 13 log n * n2 ) i e log log n ( e 11 Thus, so that some graph G E F is nor bad. DECOMPOSITIONS OFHYPERGRAPHS 241 Now, let us consider a common subgraph of G, and G,. H must be connected since all edges in G, contain the common vertex u, . Also, 1V(H)1 ( n 13 since any connected component of G, has at most ,I/3 vertices. Finally, property (c) of G, implies IWO < n 3 log n/loglog n. Since G, and G, each have at least n5j3/10 edges then U( {G, , G, }) > c, n4 log log n/log n. This completes the proof. m BOUNDS ON U,(n;3) In this section we consider U-decompositions of k > 3 3-graphs. As might be expected, our bounds are not as tight as in the case k = 2. THEOREM 2. For any E > 0, C3 n2-2fk-c < U,(n; 3) < c4n2--llk. Proof. Again, we first attack the upper bound. Let G, , G, ,..., G, be k 3graphs with n vertices and e edges. There are two possibilities. (i) e > n3-*lk. In this case repeatedly remove a common subgraph (guaranteed by Lemma 1) having at least ek/( z )k- edges. Let e, denote the number of edges remaining in each graph after i such subgraphs have been removed. Then ei+ I< ei - Letting ai = eJ(: ) we obtain a,, , < ai - a:. Since oi = e/( J ) < 1 and W l/N- 1) _ (i)-kl(k-1) < (i + ~)-ll(k-l~ then it follows by induction that ai < (i)-ll(k- ) for all i, 248 i.e., CHUNG, ERDijS, AND GRAHAM eiQ (i)- lck- )i . (1 (n2-l/k)-llW) ( ; ) <n3-(2-llkWl(k-l)) < n3-2/ka After n2 - Ilk such subgraphs have been removed, the number of edges remaining in each graph is at most (ii) e < n3-*lk . In this case we repeatedly apply Lemma 3. Let ei denote the number of edges each (hyper) graph has after i applcations of Lemma 3 (with e, denoting the initial number of edges on each graph at the beginning of this step). Thus, ei ei+lGel- J 5n As in the proof of Theorem 1, it can be shown that this implies 5ein < (J5n2- lk - i/2)*. Therefore, after at most 2 \/5 n2- lk steps all edges have been removed from all Gi. Taking count of the number of subgraphs removed in each of the two ranges for e, we conclude U,(n; 3) < cq n2- lk as required. The lower bound on U,(n; 3) will be proved using probability arguments. More precisely, we claim that for all E > 0, there exist 3-graphs G, , G, ,..., G, with n vertices and n3-*lk edges such that any subgraph common to all of them has at most n1 + edges, provi,ded n is sufficiently large. Elementary counting arguments show that the number of k-sets of 3graphs with n vertices and n3-2 k edges which contain a common subgraph with at least n It edges is less than Since B kG n3n +Enknn(3-2/k)k.n t~ n(l+6)n + eknn3kn +r < DECOMPOSlTlONS OFHYPERGRAPHS 249 for n sufficiently large then and so, there exists a k-set of such graphs G, , G, ,..., G, with any common subgraph having at most n edges. Thus, for n sufficiently large. This completes the proof of Theorem 2. 1 BOUNDS ON U,(n;r) This section will investigate bounds for general r-graphs. There are two cases, depending on the parity of r. THEOREM 3. For r even. cj c2 < U,(n; r) < c,n 12. Proof. Let G, and G, be two r-graphs, each with n vertices and e edges. There are two possibilities. (i) e > d *. For this case we apply Lemma 1 repeatedly, removing common subgraphs having at least e /( !j ) edges. If e, denotes the current number of edges remaining after i steps, then it can be shown by methods similar to those used in Theorems 1 and 2 that e, < (y )/i. Thus, after at most n * steps there are at most nr * edges left. (ii) e < nr *. In this case we simply remove one edge at a time. Combining and so. the two processes, the decomposition U2(n; r) 4 c6nr/2. requires at most 2n The lower bound is established by constructing two hypergraphs G, and G, with cnr 2 edges for which the largest common subgraph has a single edge. To begin with, let G; be the (hyper)graph defined by V(G;) = lv I ,..., v,,} and E(Gi) = {{v, ,..., v,,~} UZ: PC (v~,~+~ ,..., v,}, 181 = r/2}. G, will be formed by selecting an arbitrary set of c5n edges from G;. G, will be an r-graph with (: )/(r;2)(ry2) edges having the property that any two edges of G, intersect in at most r/2 - 1 vertices. The existence of 250 CHUNG,ERD&,AND GRAHAM such a G, is guaranteed by the following considerations. Let S be an arbitrary r-subset of ( 1,2,..., n}. The number of r-sets which intersect S in i elements is (f)( ,:I ). The total number of r-sets which intersect S in more than r/2 - 1 elements is CJfO (5)( 7 ). Therefore, there must exist a family ST of r-sets such that: (a) any two r-sets in Y intersect in at most r/2 - 1 elements; Note that any two edges in G, intersect in at least r/2 elements. Thus, the largest common subgraph of G, and G, has just one edge. This implies U,(n; r) 2 U({ G,, G,)) > c,n *. and the proof of Theorem 3 is complete. THEOREM 1 4. For r odd, c 7 n(r-1) l(2r-3) g g < u2cn; r) < Cgnr/2a log n Proof. The upper bound proof follows the same lines as the corresponding result in Theorem 3. For the lower bound, we consider the following two r-graphs G, and G, on n vertices. G, consists of n v- ) (~~-~) disjoint copies of complete r-graphs on r~(~-~) (*~-~) vertices. Observe that G, has ~ rz( *- - ) (~~-~) edges. For G, we will take a hypergraph satisfying the following properties: (a) There is a vertex u, which belongs to all edges of G, ; (b) G, has ~~rz( -~-~) (*~-~) edges; (c) Consider the (r - I)-graph G given by V(G ) = V(G) - {vi} and E(G ) = (P- (vi}: PE E(G,)}. Then any induced subhypergraph of G on r~( -*) (*~-~) points has at most r~ -* * -~) log n/loglog n edges. The (probabilistic) proof that such a graph G, exists is very similar to that used in Theorem 1 and is omitted. Any common subgraph of G, and G, must be connected and has at most n -2) (2r-3) vertices. Thus, it has at most n (r-2v(2r-3) log n/loglog n edges. It follows from this that U,(n; r) > c7n(r-1)2 (2r-3). I DECOMPOSITIONS CONCLUDING OFHYPERGRAPHS REMARKS 251 We close this section with the final result of the paper. Its proof uses no new techniques and will not be included. THEOREM 5. For all r > 3 and all k, nr-1-r/k < U,(n; r) < nr-l- k, for n suficiently large. REFERENCES 1. F. R. K. CHUNG, P. ERDBS, R. L. GRAHAM, S. M. ULAM, AND F. F. YAO, Minimal decompositions of two graphs into pairwise isomorphic subgraphs, in Proceedings, Tenth Southeastern Conference on Combinatorics, Graph Theory and Computing (1979), pp. 3-18. 2. F. R. K. CHUNG, P. ERD~S, AND R. L. GRAHAM, Minimal decompositions of graphs into mutually isomorphic subgraphs, Cumbinaforica 1 (198 I), 13-24. 582aJ32/2-9
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Internet Mathematics Vol. 1, No. 2: 177-192 Guessing Secrets with Inner Product Questions Fan Chung, Ronald Graham, and Linyuan Lu We suppose we are given some xed (but unknown) subset X of a set = Fn , 2 where F2 denotes the eld of two elements. ...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Nomination for Ronald L. Graham for AMS President Written by Gian-Carlo Rota Appeared in Notices of AMS, 1991 It is a privilege, as well as a singular honor, for me to place Ronald L. Grahams name in nomination for the Presidency of the American Ma...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Discrete Comput Geom 35:3772 (2006) DOI: 10.1007/s00454-005-1197-8 Geometry 2005 Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. Discrete & Computational Apollonian Circle Packings: Geometry and Group Theory III. Higher Dimensions Ronald L. Graham,1 Jeffr...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
ADVANCES IN MATHEMATICS 29, 60-88 (1978) Distance Matrix R. L. Polynomials GRAHAM of Trees Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey AND L. LOVASZ JATE Bolyai Intezet, Szeged, Hungary Let G be a finite connected graph. If x and y are vert...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
R. L. Graham and N. J. A. Sloane Mathemutics and Statistics Research Center Bell Laboratories Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974 Submitted by Richard A. Brualdi ABSTRACT An anti-Hadamard matrix may be loosely defined as a real (0,l) matrix which is inve...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
JOURNAL OF ALGOFUTHMS 4,324-331 (1983) Finding the Convex Bell Laboratories, Hull of a Simple Murray Hill, New Jersqv 07974 Polygon RONALD L. GRAHAM AND F. FRANCESYAO Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, Palo Alto, California 94304 Received Oc...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Primitive Juggling Sequences Fan Chung and Ron Graham 1. INTRODUCTION. Over the past two decades, a number of ways have been developed for representing periodic juggling patterns by nite sequences of nonnegative integers. In the most common of these,...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Approximately Optimal Trees for Group Key Management with Batch Updates Minming Li1 , Ze Feng1 , Ronald L. Graham2 and Frances F. Yao1 Department of Computer Science City University of Hong Kong {minmli,fengze}@cs.cityu.edu.hk, csfyao@cityu.edu.hk 2 ...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
JOURNAL OF COMBINATORIAL THEORY, Series A 27, 397400(1979) Note Maximum Antichains of Rectangular Arrays G. W. PECK Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey, 07974 Communicated by the Managing Editors Received March 2, 1978 INTRODUCTION Give...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Discrete Mathematics North-Holland 110 (1992) 43-59 43 Universal cycles for combinatorial structures Fan Chung Bell Communications Research, Morristown, NJ 07960, USA Persi Diaconis Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA Ron Graham AT&T Be...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
On the Construction of Zero-Deciency Parallel Prex Circuits with Minimum Depth HAIKUN ZHU, CHUNG-KUAN CHENG, and RONALD GRAHAM University of California, San Diego A parallel prex circuit has n inputs x1 , x2 , . . . , xn , and computes the n outputs...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
2/4/00 Ron Graham Celebration: A Magical Day Friday, December 10, 1999 - a day that will be remembered, at least by many at AT&T Labs Research, as Ron Graham Day. It was on that day that the Florham Park workplace world as most know it came to a hal...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
JOURNAL OF NUMBER THEORY 2, 152-161 (1970) Irregularities in the Distributions of Finite Sequences E. R. BERLEKAMP AND R. L. GRAHAM Bell Telephone Laboratories, Communicated Inc., Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974 by H. 8. Mann Received Decembe...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
JOURNAL OF COMBINATORIAL THEORY, Series A 49, 180-187 (1988) Note On Induced Subgraphs F. R. K. CHUNG Bell Communication Research, Morristown, New Jersey 07960 of the Cube ZOLTAN F~REDI AT & T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974, ...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
ADVANCES IN APPLIED MATHEMATICS 2, 121-137 (1981) On the Permanents of Complements of the Direct Sum of identity Matrices F. R. K. CHUNG,* P. DIACONIS,+* R. L. GRAHAM,* AND C. L. MALLOWS* *Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07974; and ba...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
ADVANCES IN APPLIED MATHEMATICS 4, 175- 196 ( 1983) The Mathematics Stanford University, Stanford of Perfect Shuffles Universiv, Cambridge, PERSI DIACONIS California 94305 and Harvard Massachusetts 02138 R. L. GRAHAM Bell Laboratories, Murray ...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics 41(1992) 215-235 North-Holland CAM 1174 215 An affine walk on the hypercube Persi Diaconis Department of Mathematics, Harvard Unioersity, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States Ron Graham AT&T Bell Labo...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
JOURNAL OF COMBINATORIAL THEORY, Series A 24, 382-394 (1978) The Number of Baxter Permutations F. R. K. CHUNG,* R. L. GRAHAM*, V. E. HOGGATT, JR.,+ AND M. KLEIMAN* *Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey, +San Jose State University San J...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
mong a variety of fundamental themes running through Stan Ulams mathematical research, one that particularly intrigued him was that of similarity. He was constantly fascinated by the problem of quantifying exactly how alike (or different) two mathema...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Old and New Problems and Results in Ramsey Theory Ron Graham University of California, San Diego Abstract In this note, I will describe a variety of problems from Ramsey theory on which I would like to see progress made. I will also discuss several...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
Improving Dense Packings of Equal Disks in a Square David W. Boll Hewlett-Packard 700 71st Ave Greeley, CO 80634 david boll@hp.com Jerry Donovan Hewlett-Packard 700 71st Ave Greeley, CO 80634 jerry donovan@hp.com Ronald L. Graham University of Cal...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
34.3 Communication Latency Aware Low Power NoC Synthesis and Engineering Univ. of California, San Diego Dept. of Computer Science Yuanfang Hu, Yi Zhu {yhu ,y2zhu}@cs. ucsd .edu ABSTRACT Ronald Graham Chung-Kuan Cheng Dept. of Computer Science h ...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
A Hierarchical Three-Way Interconnect Architecture for Hexagonal Processors Feng Zhou, Esther Y. Cheng, Bo Yao, Chung-Kuan Cheng, Ronald Graham Department of Computer Science and Engineering University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-01...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
JOURNAL OF COMBINATORIAL THEORY, Series A 54, 95-111 (1990) Iterated Combinatorial Density Theorems P. FRANKL Murray AT T Bell Laboratories Murray Hill, N...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
JOURNAL OF COMBINATORIAL THEORY, Series B 24, 14-23 (1978) On Graphs which Contain Ail Small Trees F. R. K. CHUNG AND R. L. GRAHAM Bell Laboratories, Mupray Hill, New Jersey 07974 Communicated by the Managing Editors We investigate those graph...
UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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UCSD >> MATH >> 175 (Winter, 2008)
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