A+ CATEGORY SCIENTIFIC UNIT

Chromatic number of spacetime

James Davies Acta Arithmetica MSC: Primary 05D10; Secondary 11B75 DOI: 10.4064/aa240306-20-12 Published online: 31 January 2025

Abstract

We observe that an old theorem of Graham implies that for any positive integer $s$, there exists some positive integer $T(s)$ such that every $s$-colouring of $\mathbb Z^2$ contains a monochromatic pair of points $(x,y),(x’,y’)$ with $(x-x’)^2 - (y-y’)^2 = (T(s))^2$. By scaling, this implies that every finite colouring of $\mathbb Q^2$ contains a monochromatic pair of points $(x,y),(x’,y’)$ with $(x-x’)^2 - (y-y’)^2 = 1$, which answers in a strong sense a problem of Kosheleva and Kreinovich on a pseudo-Euclidean analogue of the Hadwiger–Nelson problem.

The proof of Graham’s theorem relies on repeated applications of van der Waerden’s theorem, and so the resulting function $T(s)$ grows extremely quickly. We give an alternative proof in the weaker setting of having a second spacial dimension that results in a significantly improved bound. To be more precise, we prove that for every positive integer $s$ with $s\equiv 2 \pmod{4}$, every $s$-colouring of $\mathbb Z^3$ contains a monochromatic pair of points $(x,y,z),(x’,y’,z’)$ such that $(x-x’)^2 + (y-y’)^2 - (z-z’)^2 = (5^{(s-2)/4}(8\cdot 5^{(s-2)/2})!)^2$. In fact, we prove a stronger density version. The density version in $\mathbb Z^2$ remains open.

Authors

  • James DaviesDepartment of Pure Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics
    University of Cambridge
    Cambridge, CB3 0WB, UK
    e-mail

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