2007 USAMO Problems/Problem 3
Problem
(András Gyárfás) Let be a set containing
elements, for some positive integer
. Suppose that the
-element subsets of
are partitioned into two classes. Prove that there are at least
pairwise disjoint sets in the same class.
Solution
Solution 1
Claim: If we have instead elements, then we must have k disjoint subsets in a class.
We proceed by Induction
Base Case: is trivial.
Case 1: If there exists an element subset
s.t.
has 2 n-element subsets in different classes.
Consider the
elements that are not in
, from the Induction hypothesis, we have
disjoint subsets in one of the classes. Those
subsets paired with a subset of
in the same class forms
disjoint subsets of size n.
Case 2: All element subsets have all of their n-element subsets in one class.
Look at any 2 n-element subsets
and
. Then we can create a path
s.t. any 2 consecutive terms belong to the same n+1-element subset.(i.e. we change 1 element each time.) Thus,
and
are in the same class and we see that all subsets are in one class. Obviously we can find
disjoint subsets of size n.
(Correct me if I'm wrong) Note: Because k-1>k
, we can group the first n+1 elements, then the next
elements, and we have
of these groupings. Then each class is going to have one
-element group from each of these
groupings. Because their elements don't repeat, the sets are disjoint)
The question is asking for the case when which we have proved.
Solution 2
Call an -element subset of
separable if it has a subset in each class of the partition. We recursively build a set
of disjoint separable subsets of
: begin with
empty and at each step if there is a separable subset which is disjoint from all sets in
add that set to
. The process terminates when every separable subset intersects a set in
. Let
be the set of elements in
which are not in any set in
. We claim that one class contains every
-element subset of
.
Suppose that are elements of
. Denote by
the set
. Note that for each
,
is not separable, so that
and
are in the same class. But then
is in the same class for each
— in particular,
and
are in the same class. But for any two sets we may construct such a sequence with
equal to one and
equal to the other.
We are now ready to construct our disjoint sets. Suppose that
. Then
, so we may select
disjoint
-element subsets of
. Then for each of the
sets in
, we may select a subset which is in the same class as all the subsets of
, for a total of
disjoint sets.
Solution 3
In order to apply induction, we generalize the result to be proved so that it reads as follows:
Proposition. If the -element subsets of a set
with
elements are partitioned into two classes, then there are at least
pairwise disjoint sets in the same class.
Proof. Fix and proceed by induction on
. The case of
is trivial. Assume
and that the proposition is true for
. Let
be the partition of the
-element subsets into two classes. If all the
-element subsets belong to the same class, the result is obvious. Otherwise select two
-element subsets
and
from different classes so that their intersection has maximal size. It is easy to see that
. (If
, then build
from
by replacing some element not in
with an element of
not already in
. Then
and
and either
and
or
and
are in different classes.) Removing
from
, there are
elements left. On this set the partition induced by
has, by the inductive hypothesis,
pairwise disjoint sets in the same class. Adding either
or
as appropriate gives
pairwise disjoint sets in the same class.
Remark: The value is sharp. A set
with
elements can be split into a set
with
elements and a set
of
elements. Let one class consist of all
-element subsets of
and the other consist of all
-element subsets that intersect
. Then neither class contains
pairwise disjoint sets.
Alternate solutions are always welcome. If you have a different, elegant solution to this problem, please add it to this page.
See also
- <url>viewtopic.php?t=145845 Discussion on AoPS/MathLinks</url>
2007 USAMO (Problems • Resources) | ||
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Followed by Problem 4 | |
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