Affiliation:
1. Institute for Theoretical Studies ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland
Abstract
AbstractGiven a graph , its Ramsey number is the minimum so that every two‐coloring of contains a monochromatic copy of . It was conjectured by Conlon, Fox, and Sudakov that if one deletes a single vertex from , the Ramsey number can change by at most a constant factor. We disprove this conjecture, exhibiting an infinite family of graphs such that deleting a single vertex from each decreases the Ramsey number by a super‐constant factor. One consequence of this result is the following. There exists a family of graphs so that in any Ramsey coloring for (i.e., a coloring of a clique on vertices with no monochromatic copy of ), one of the color classes has density .