December 2009 The strength of the rainbow Ramsey Theorem
Barbara F. Csima, Joseph R. Mileti
J. Symbolic Logic 74(4): 1310-1324 (December 2009). DOI: 10.2178/jsl/1254748693

Abstract

The Rainbow Ramsey Theorem is essentially an “anti-Ramsey" theorem which states that certain types of colorings must be injective on a large subset (rather than constant on a large subset). Surprisingly, this version follows easily from Ramsey's Theorem, even in the weak system RCA0 of reverse mathematics. We answer the question of the converse implication for pairs, showing that the Rainbow Ramsey Theorem for pairs is in fact strictly weaker than Ramsey's Theorem for pairs over RCA0. The separation involves techniques from the theory of randomness by showing that every 2-random bounds an ω-model of the Rainbow Ramsey Theorem for pairs. These results also provide as a corollary a new proof of Martin's theorem that the hyperimmune degrees have measure one.

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Barbara F. Csima. Joseph R. Mileti. "The strength of the rainbow Ramsey Theorem." J. Symbolic Logic 74 (4) 1310 - 1324, December 2009. https://doi.org/10.2178/jsl/1254748693

Information

Published: December 2009
First available in Project Euclid: 5 October 2009

zbMATH: 1188.03044
MathSciNet: MR2583822
Digital Object Identifier: 10.2178/jsl/1254748693

Rights: Copyright © 2009 Association for Symbolic Logic

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Vol.74 • No. 4 • December 2009
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