English

The set splittability problem

Combinatorics 2019-09-17 v4

Abstract

The set splittability problem is the following: given a finite collection of finite sets, does there exits a single set that contains exactly half the elements from each set in the collection? (If a set has odd size, we allow the floor or ceiling.) It is natural to study the set splittability problem in the context of combinatorial discrepancy theory and its applications, since a collection is splittable if and only if it has discrepancy 1\leq1. We introduce a natural generalization of splittability problem called the pp-splittability problem, where we replace the fraction 12\frac12 in the definition with an arbitrary fraction p(0,1)p\in(0,1). We first show that the pp-splittability problem is NP-complete. We then give several criteria for pp-splittability, including a complete characterization of pp-splittability for three or fewer sets (pp arbitrary), and for four or fewer sets (p=12p=\frac12). Finally we prove the asymptotic prevalence of splittability over unsplittability in an appropriate sense.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1611.01542,
  title  = {The set splittability problem},
  author = {Peter Bernstein and Cashous Bortner and Samuel Coskey and Shuni Li and Connor Simpson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1611.01542},
  year   = {2019}
}