On Proper Colorings of Functions (2211.10654v2)
Abstract: We investigate the infinite version of the $k$-switch problem of Greenwell and Lov\'asz. Given infinite cardinals ${\kappa}$ and ${\lambda}$, for functions $x,y\in {}{\lambda}\kappa $ we say that they are totally different if $x(i)\ne y(i)$ for each $i\in {\lambda}$. A function $F:{}{\lambda}\kappa \longrightarrow {\kappa} $ is a proper coloring if $F(x)\ne F(y)$ whenever $x$ and $y$ are totally different elements of ${}\lambda{\kappa} $. We say that $F$ is weakly uniform iff there are pairwise totally different functions ${r_{\alpha}:{\alpha}<{\kappa}}\subset {}{\lambda}{\kappa}$ such that $F(r_{\alpha})={\alpha}$; $F$ is tight if there is no proper coloring $G:{}{\lambda}\kappa \longrightarrow {\kappa}$ such that there is exactly one $x\in {}{\lambda}{\kappa}$ with $G(x)\ne F(x)$. We show that given a proper coloring $F:{}{\lambda}{\kappa}\to {\kappa}$, the following statements are equivalent $F$ is weakly uniform, there is a ${\kappa} {+}$-complete ultrafilter $\mathscr{U}$ on ${\lambda}$ and there is a permutation ${\pi}\in Symm({\kappa})$ such that for each $x\in {}{\lambda}{\kappa}$ we have $$F(x)={\pi}({\alpha})\ \Longleftrightarrow \ {i\in {\lambda}: x(i)={\alpha}} \in \mathscr{U}.$$ We also show that there are tight proper colorings which cannot be obtained such a way.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.