English

Localization: A Framework to Generalize Extremal Graph Problems

Combinatorics 2026-03-10 v4 Discrete Mathematics

Abstract

Extremal graph theory studies the maximum or minimum number of subgraphs isomorphic to a prescribed graph under given constraints. \textit{Localization} has recently emerged as a framework that refines such problems by assigning extremal quantities locally (to vertices or edges) and then aggregating them. This perspective not only recovers classical results but also leads to sharper bounds. A classical result states that a connected planar graph with a finite girth gg satisfies \begin{equation*} m \leq \frac{g}{g-2}(n-2) \end{equation*} Wood~\cite{wood} derived upper bounds on the number of KtK_t-cliques in graphs of bounded maximum degree, expressed in terms of both the number of vertices and the number of edges: \begin{align*} ex(n,K_t,K_{1,d+1}) \leq \frac{n}{d+1}\binom{d+1}{t} \\ mex(m,K_t,K_{1,d+1}) \leq \frac{m}{\binom{d+1}{2}}\binom{d+1}{t} \end{align*} More recently, Chakraborty and Chen~\cite{CHAKRABORTI2024103955} established a similar upper bound for graphs with bounded path length: \begin{equation*} mex(m,K_t,P_{r+1}) \leq \frac{m}{\binom{r}{2}}\binom{r}{t} \end{equation*} In this paper, we employ the localization framework to improve these bounds and provide structural characterizations of the extremal graphs attaining them.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2508.20946,
  title  = {Localization: A Framework to Generalize Extremal Graph Problems},
  author = {Rajat Adak and L. Sunil Chandran},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2508.20946},
  year   = {2026}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T05:10:35.759Z