Given a set , a collection of subsets is called partition regular if every set A in the collection has the property that, no matter how A is partitioned into finitely many subsets, at least one of the subsets will also belong to the collection. That is,
for any , and any finite partition , there exists an i ≤ n such that belongs to . Ramsey theory is sometimes characterized as the study of which collections are partition regular.
Examples
The collection of all infinite subsets of an infinite set X is a prototypical example. In this case partition regularity asserts that every finite partition of an infinite set has an infinite cell (i.e. the infinite pigeonhole principle.)
For any ultrafilter on a set , is partition regular: for any , if , then exactly one .
Sets of recurrence: a set R of integers is called a set of recurrence if for any measure-preserving transformation of the probability space (Ω, β, μ) and of positive measure there is a nonzero so that .
Call a subset of natural numbers a.p.-rich if it contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions. Then the collection of a.p.-rich subsets is partition regular (Van der Waerden, 1927).
Let be the set of all n-subsets of . Let . For each n, is partition regular. (Ramsey, 1930).
For each infinite cardinal, the collection of stationary sets of is partition regular. More is true: if is stationary and for some , then some is stationary.
The collection of -sets: is a -set if contains the set of differences for some sequence.
The set of barriers on : call a collection of finite subsets of a barrier if:
and
for all infinite , there is some such that the elements of X are the smallest elements of I; i.e. and .
Call a subset of natural numbers i.p.-rich if it contains arbitrarily large finite sets together with all their finite sums. Then the collection of i.p.-rich subsets is partition regular (Jon Folkman, Richard Rado, and J. Sanders, 1968).[3]
MTk sets for each k, i.e.k-tuples of finite sums (Milliken–Taylor, 1975)
Central sets; i.e. the members of any minimal idempotent in , the Stone–Čech compactification of the integers. (Furstenberg, 1981, see also Hindman, Strauss, 1998)
Diophantine equations
A Diophantine equation is called partition regular if the collection of all infinite subsets of containing a solution is partition regular. Rado's theorem characterises exactly which systems of linear Diophantine equations are partition regular. Much progress has been made recently on classifying nonlinear Diophantine equations.[7][8]