Conjecture Let if is odd and if is even. Let . Assume we start with some number and repeatedly take the of the current number. Prove that no matter what the initial number is we eventually reach .
Conjecture Let be a cubic graph with no bridge. Then there is a coloring of the edges of using the edges of the Petersen graph so that any three mutually adjacent edges of map to three mutually adjancent edges in the Petersen graph.
For any simple digraph , we let be the number of unordered pairs of nonadjacent vertices (i.e. the number of non-edges), and be the size of the smallest feedback edge set.
Conjecture If is a simple digraph without directed cycles of length , then .
Conjecture Is it possible to color edges of the complete graph using colors, so that the coloring is proper and no 4-cycle and no 4-edge path is using only two colors?
Equivalently: is the star chromatic index of linear in ?
A covering design, or covering, is a family of -subsets, called blocks, chosen from a -set, such that each -subset is contained in at least one of the blocks. The number of blocks is the covering’s size, and the minimum size of such a covering is denoted by .
Problem Find a closed form, recurrence, or better bounds for . Find a procedure for constructing minimal coverings.
A friendly partition of a graph is a partition of the vertices into two sets so that every vertex has at least as many neighbours in its own class as in the other.
Problem Is it true that for every , all but finitely many -regular graphs have friendly partitions?
Conjecture If is a simple graph which is the union of pairwise edge-disjoint complete graphs, each of which has vertices, then the chromatic number of is .
Conjecture Every surreal number has a unique sign expansion, i.e. function , where is some ordinal. This is the length of given sign expansion and also the birthday of the corresponding surreal number. Let us denote this length of as .
Problem (2) Find a composite or which divides both (see Fermat pseudoprime) and the Fibonacci number (see Lucas pseudoprime), or prove that there is no such .
Conjecture Let is a -separable (the same as for symmetric transitive) compact funcoid and is a uniform space (reflexive, symmetric, and transitive endoreloid) such that . Then .
The main purpose here is to find a direct proof of this conjecture. It seems that this conjecture can be derived from the well known theorem about existence of exactly one uniformity on a compact set. But that would be what I call an indirect proof, we need a direct proof instead.
The direct proof may be constructed by correcting all errors an omissions in this draft article.
Direct proof could be better because with it we would get a little more general statement like this:
Conjecture Let be a -separable compact reflexive symmetric funcoid and be a reloid such that \item ; \item .
Conjecture For every graph without a bridge, there is a flow .
Conjecture There exists a map so that antipodal points of receive opposite values, and so that any three points which are equidistant on a great circle have values which sum to zero.
Problem Does the following equality hold for every graph ?
The crossing number of a graph is the minimum number of edge crossings in any drawing of in the plane. In the pairwise crossing number, we minimize the number of pairs of edges that cross.