How many pairs of intersecting intervals can be chosen from two finite sets of disjoint intervals?

indimiamimactjcf

indimiamimactjcf

Answered question

2022-05-14

How many pairs of intersecting intervals can be chosen from two finite sets of disjoint intervals?
Let K := { I J I I , J J } { } ,, where I is a finite set of disjoint real intervals, and so is J .
Obviously | K | | I | | J | . Are there any better bounds on the cardinality of K ?
Where in the literature can one find related theory and results?

Answer & Explanation

Ariella Bruce

Ariella Bruce

Beginner2022-05-15Added 19 answers

Step 1
Consider the bipartite graph with vertices I J and edges (I, J) if I intersects J.
If I I then edges (I,J) mean that either J I (and then J is not connected to any other I I ) or J contains I (and then I is not connected to any other J J ) or J overlaps with I (there are at most two such J).
Step 2
So we can initially ignore any I that is fully contained in some J, and any J that is fully contained in some I. Then each remaining node can have at most two edges, and we have a path graph with no more than N 1 edges, where N is the number of remaining nodes. The I and J that we initially left out just add one more edge each. It follows that | K | < | I | + | J | .

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