Kruskal–Katona theorem


In algebraic combinatorics, the Kruskal–Katona theorem gives a complete characterization of the f-vectors of abstract simplicial complexes. It includes as a special case the Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem and can be restated in terms of uniform hypergraphs. It is named after Joseph Kruskal and Gyula O. H. Katona, but has been independently discovered by several others.

Statement

Given two positive integers N and i, there is a unique way to expand N as a sum of binomial coefficients as follows:
This expansion can be constructed by applying the greedy algorithm: set ni to be the maximal n such that replace N with the difference, i with i − 1, and repeat until the difference becomes zero. Define

Statement for simplicial complexes

An integral vector is the f-vector of some -dimensional simplicial complex if and only if

Statement for uniform hypergraphs

Let A be a set consisting of N distinct i-element subsets of a fixed set U and B be the set of all -element subsets of the sets in A. Expand N as above. Then the cardinality of B is bounded below as follows:

Lovász' simplified formulation

The following weaker but useful form is due to Let A be a set of i-element subsets of a fixed set U and B be the set of all -element subsets of the sets in A. If then.
In this formulation, x need not be an integer. The value of the binomial expression is.

Ingredients of the proof

For every positive i, list all i-element subsets a1 < a2 < … ai of the set N of natural numbers in the colexicographical order. For example, for i = 3, the list begins
Given a vector with positive integer components, let Δf be the subset of the power set 2N consisting of the empty set together with the first i-element subsets of N in the list for i = 1, …, d. Then the following conditions are equivalent:
  1. Vector f is the f-vector of a simplicial complex Δ.
  2. Δf is a simplicial complex.
The difficult implication is 1 ⇒ 2.

History

The theorem is named after Joseph Kruskal and Gyula O. H. Katona, who published it in 1963 and 1968 respectively.
According to, it was discovered independently by,,,, and.
writes that the earliest of these references, by Schützenberger, has an incomplete proof.