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A note on extremal constructions for the Erdős–Rademacher problem

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2024

Xizhi Liu
Affiliation:
Mathematics Institute and DIMAP, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
Oleg Pikhurko*
Affiliation:
Mathematics Institute and DIMAP, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
*
Corresponding author: Oleg Pikhurko; Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

For given positive integers $r\ge 3$, $n$ and $e\le \binom{n}{2}$, the famous Erdős–Rademacher problem asks for the minimum number of $r$-cliques in a graph with $n$ vertices and $e$ edges. A conjecture of Lovász and Simonovits from the 1970s states that, for every $r\ge 3$, if $n$ is sufficiently large then, for every $e\le \binom{n}{2}$, at least one extremal graph can be obtained from a complete partite graph by adding a triangle-free graph into one part.

In this note, we explicitly write the minimum number of $r$-cliques predicted by the above conjecture. Also, we describe what we believe to be the set of extremal graphs for any $r\ge 4$ and all large $n$, amending the previous conjecture of Pikhurko and Razborov.

MSC classification

Type
Paper
Creative Commons
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

Given integers $n \ge r \ge 2$ , let $T_{r}(n)$ denote the balanced complete $r$ -partite graph on $n$ vertices, and let $t_{r}(n)$ denote the number of edges in $T_{r}(n)$ . The celebrated Turán Theorem [Reference Turán24] (with the case $r=3$ proved earlier by Mantel [Reference Mantel13]) states that, for $n \ge r \ge 3$ , every $n$ -vertex graph with at least $t_{r-1}(n)+1$ edges contains a copy of an $r$ -clique $K_{r}$ , that is, a complete graph on $r$ vertices. An unpublished result of Rademacher from 1941 (see [Reference Erdős3]) states that, in fact, every $n$ -vertex graph with $t_{2}(n)+1$ edges contains at least $\left \lfloor n/2\right \rfloor$ copies of $K_{3}$ . The graph obtained from $T_{2}(n)$ by adding one edge to the larger part shows that the bound $\left \lfloor n/2\right \lfloor$ is tight. Rademacher’s theorem motivated Erdős [Reference Erdős3] to consider the following more general question, now referred to as the Erdős–Rademacher problem: determine

(1) \begin{align} g_{r}(n,e) \,:\!=\, \min \Big \{N(K_r,G)\,\colon\, \text{$G$ is an $(n,e)$-graph}\Big \}, \end{align}

where an $(n,e)$ -graph means a graph with $n$ vertices and $e$ edges and $N(K_r,G)$ denotes the number of $r$ -cliques in $G$ .

This problem has attracted a lot of attention and has been actively studied since it first appeared. Various results covering special ranges of $(n,e)$ were obtained (see e.g. [Reference Bollobás2, Reference Erdős4Reference Goodman7, Reference Lovász and Simonovits11, Reference Lovász and Simonovits12, Reference Moon and Moser14, Reference Nikiforov18Reference Nordhaus and Stewart20]) until Razborov [Reference Razborov22] determined the asymptotic value of $g_{3}(n,e)$ using flag algebras. Later, using different methods, Nikiforov [Reference Nikiforov17] determined the asymptotic value of $g_r(n,e)$ for $r=4$ and Reiher [Reference Reiher23] did this for all $r \ge 5$ . For some further related results, we refer the reader to [Reference Balogh and Clemen1, Reference Kim, Liu, Pikhurko and Sharifzadeh8, Reference Liu and Mubayi10, Reference Mubayi15, Reference Mubayi16, Reference Pikhurko and Razborov21, Reference Xiao and Katona25].

Determining the exact value of $g_{r}(n,e)$ seems very challenging due to multiple (conjectured) extremal constructions. Given $n$ and $e$ in $\mathbb{N}\,:\!=\,\{1,2,\dots \}$ with $e \le \binom{n}{2}$ , let

(2) \begin{align} k = k(n,e) \,:\!=\, \min \left \{s\in \mathbb{N}\,\colon\, t_{s}(n) \ge e\right \}, \end{align}

that is, $k$ is the smallest chromatic number that an $(n,e)$ -graph can have. Let $\mathcal{H}_{1}(n,e)$ (resp. $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ ) denote the family of $(n,e)$ -graphs that can be obtained from a complete $(k-1)$ -partite (resp. complete multipartite) graph by adding a triangle-free graph into one part. Note that the only difference between these two definitions is that we restrict the number of parts to $k-1$ when defining $\mathcal{H}_{1}(n,e)$ ; thus $\mathcal{H}_1(n,e) \subseteq \mathcal{K}(n,e)$ . Lovász and Simonovits [Reference Lovász and Simonovits11] conjectured that for every integer $r\ge 3$ there exists $n_0$ such that, for all positive integers $n \ge n_0$ and $e\le \binom{n}{2}$ , it holds that

(3) \begin{align} g_{r}(n,e) = \min \Big \{N(K_r, H)\,\colon\, H \in \mathcal{K}(n,e)\Big \}, \end{align}

that is, at least one $g_r(n,e)$ -extremal graph is in $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ . Note that (3) trivially holds for $e\le t_{r-1}(n)$ when $g_r(n,e)=0$ .

Erdős in [Reference Erdős3] (resp. [Reference Erdős4]) showed that (3) is true for $r = 3$ when $e \le t_2(n) + 3$ (resp. $e\le t_2(n)+cn$ for some constant $c\gt 0$ ). Lovász and Simonovits [Reference Lovász and Simonovits11] (see also Nikiforov and Khadzhiivanov [Reference Nikiforov and Khadzhiivanov19]) extended the result of Erdős to all $e$ satisfying $e \le t_2(n) + \lfloor n/2 \rfloor$ . Later, Lovász and Simonovits [Reference Lovász and Simonovits12] proved (3) for $r \ge 3$ when $e/\binom{n}{2}$ lies in a small upper neighbourhood of $1-1/m$ for some integer $m \ge r-1$ . More recently, Liu, Pikhurko and Staden [Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9] determined $g_{3}(n,e)$ for all positive integers $n$ when $e \le (1-o(1))\binom{n}{2}$ . Determining the exact value of $g_{r}(n,e)$ for $r \ge 4$ is still wide open in general.

Given $n, e\in \mathbb N$ with $e \le \binom{n}{2}$ , let $\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }=\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }(n,e) \in \mathbb{N}^{k}$ be the unique vector such that

\begin{align*} a_{k}^{\ast } \,:\!=\, \min \left \{a\in \mathbb{N}\,\colon\, a(n-a) + t_{k-1}(n-a) \ge e\right \}, \\ a_{1}^{\ast }+\dots +a_{k-1}^{\ast } = n-a_{k}^{\ast }, \quad \text{and}\quad a_{1}^{\ast } \ge \dots \ge a_{k-1}^{\ast } \ge a_{1}^{\ast }-1, \end{align*}

where $k = k(n,e)$ is as defined in (2). Thus $a_k^{\ast }$ is the smallest possible part size that a $k$ -partite $(n,e)$ -graph can have. Also, let

\begin{align*} m^{\ast } = m^{\ast }(n,e) & \,:\!=\, \sum _{\{i,j\}\in \binom{[k]}{2}}a_{i}^{\ast }a_{j}^{\ast } -e, \quad \text{and}\quad \\ h^{\ast }_{r}(n,e) & \,:\!=\, \sum _{I\in \binom{[k]}{r}}\prod _{i\in I}a_i^{\ast } - m^{\ast }\cdot \sum _{I^{\prime}\in \binom{[k-2]}{r-2}}\prod _{j\in I^{\prime}}a_j^{\ast }, \end{align*}

where $[k]\,:\!=\,\{1,\dots, k\}$ and $\binom{X}{k}\,:\!=\{Y\subseteq X\;:\;|Y|=k\}$ . Let $T\,:\!=\, K[A_{1}^{\ast }, \ldots, A_{k}^{\ast }]$ be the complete $k$ -partite graph with parts $A_1^{\ast },\dots, A_{k}^{\ast }$ where $|A_{i}^{\ast }| = a_{i}^{\ast }$ for $i\in [k]$ . Let $H^{\ast } = H^{\ast }(n,e)$ be the graph obtained from $T$ by removing an $m^{\ast }$ -edge star whose centre lies in $A_{k}^{\ast }$ and whose leaves lie in $A_{k-1}^{\ast }$ . It is not hard to see (see e.g. the calculation in (10)) that $0\le m^{\ast }\le a_{k-1}^{\ast }-a_{k}^{\ast }$ , so the graph $H^{\ast }$ is well-defined. Also, let $\mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ be the family defined as follows: If $m^{\ast } = 0$ , take all graphs obtained from $T$ by replacing, for some $i\in [k-1]$ , the bipartite graph $T[A_{i}^{\ast }\cup A_{k}^{\ast }]$ with an arbitrary triangle-free graph with $a_{i}^{\ast }a_{k}^{\ast }$ edges. If $m^{\ast }\gt 0$ , take all graphs obtained from $T$ by replacing $T[A_{k-1}^{\ast }\cup A_{k}^{\ast }]$ with an arbitrary triangle-free graph with $a_{k-1}^{\ast }a_{k}^{\ast } - m^{\ast }$ edges. Observe that $\mathcal{H}_1^{\ast }(n,e) \subseteq \mathcal{H}_1(n,e)$ and every graph in $\mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ has the same number of $r$ -cliques (see Fact 2.2); also, the graph $H^*=H^*(n,e)$ is contained in $\mathcal{H}_1^{\ast }(n,e)$ .

Sharpening the Lovász–Simonovits Conjecture, Pikhurko and Razborov [Reference Pikhurko and Razborov21, Conjecture 1.4] conjectured that, for $r\ge 4$ and sufficiently large $n$ , every $n$ -vertex graph with $e\le \binom{n}{2}$ edges and that contains the minimum number of $K_r$ is in $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ . However, we show here that this conjecture is false (see Theorem 1.1 and Proposition 1.2) and present an amended version (see Conjecture 1.3) as follows.

First, we write explicitly the value of $g_{r}(n,e)$ predicted by the Lovász–Simonovits Conjecture. (We also refer the reader to [Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9, Proposition 1.5] where similar results are proved for $r=3$ .)

Theorem 1.1. Suppose that $r,n,e\in \mathbb N$ satisfy $n \ge r \ge 3$ and $e \le \binom{n}{2}$ . Then

(4) \begin{align} \min \Big \{N(K_r, G)\,\colon\, G\in \mathcal{K}(n,e)\Big \} = h_{r}^{\ast }(n,e). \end{align}

Moreover, if $r\ge 4$ and $e\gt t_{r-1}(n)$ , then

(5) \begin{align} \Big \{G \in \mathcal{K}(n,e)\,\colon\, N(K_r, G) = h_{r}^{\ast }(n,e)\Big \} & = \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e). \end{align}

Note that, since $\mathcal{H}_1^{\ast }(n,e)\subseteq \mathcal{H}_1(n,e)$ , Theorem 1.1 remains true if we replace $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ by $\mathcal{H}_1(n,e)$ . In fact, the later version of the Lovász–Simonovits Conjecture from [Reference Lovász and Simonovits12] states that, for all sufficiently large $n\ge n_0(r)$ , at least one $g_r(n,e)$ -extremal graph is in $\mathcal{H}_1(n,e)$ . By (4), these two conjectures are equivalent. One should be able to show with some extra work that (5) also holds for $r=3$ (it is also implied by the results in [Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9] that (5) holds for most $e$ , given $n$ ). Since our main focus is the case $r\ge 4$ , we do not pursue this strengthening here.

Given integers $n,e \in \mathbb{N}$ with $e\le \binom{n}{2}$ , we define the family $\mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e)$ as follows (with $k, \boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }, m^{\ast }$ being as before). Take those graphs in $\mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ that are $k$ -partite, along with the following family. Take disjoint sets $A_{1}, \ldots, A_{k}$ of sizes $a_{1}^{\ast }, \ldots, a_{k}^{\ast }$ , respectively, and let $m\,:\!=\, m^{\ast }$ . If $m^{\ast } = 0$ and $a_{1}^{\ast } \ge a_{k}^{\ast }+2$ , then we also allow $\left (|A_{1}|, \ldots, |A_{k}|\right ) = \left (a_{2}^{\ast }, \ldots, a_{k-1}^{\ast }, a_{1}^{\ast }-1, a_{k}^{\ast }+1\right )$ and let $m\,:\!=\,a_1^{\ast }-a_k^{\ast }-1$ . Take all graphs obtained from $K[A_{1}, \ldots, A_{k}]$ by removing any $m$ edges, each connecting $B_i$ to $A_i$ for some $i\in I$ , where $I\,:\!=\, \left \{i\in [k-1]\,\colon\, |A_{i}| = |A_{k-1}|\right \}$ and $\left \{B_i\colon i\in I\right \}$ are some pairwise disjoint subsets of $A_{k}$ . Clearly, every graph in $\mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e)$ is an $(n,e)$ -graph.

Proposition 1.2. Suppose that $n \ge r \ge 4$ and $t_{r-1}(n)\lt e \le \binom{n}{2}$ are integers. Then

\begin{align*} N(K_r, G) = h_{r}^{\ast }(n,e), \quad \text{for every\ } G\in \mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e). \end{align*}

Also, there are infinitely many pairs $(n,e) \in \mathbb{N}^2$ with $t_{r-1}(n) \lt e \le \binom{n}{2}$ such that $\mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e) \setminus \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e) \neq \emptyset$ .

We propose the following amended conjecture.

Conjecture 1.3. Let $r \ge 4$ be fixed. For every sufficiently large integer $n$ and every integer $e$ with $t_{r-1}(n)\lt e \le \binom{n}{2}$ , it holds that

\begin{align*} \Big \{G\colon \text{$G$ is an $(n,e)$-graph with $N(K_r, G) = g_{r}(n,e)$} \Big \} = \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e) \cup \mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e). \end{align*}

For comparison with the case $r=3$ , the exact result of Liu, Pikhurko and Staden [Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9] valid for $e\le (1-o(1))\binom{n}{2}$ states that the set of $g_3(n,e)$ -extremal graphs is exactly $\mathcal{H}_{0}^{\ast }(n,e)\cup \mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e)$ for a certain explicit family $\mathcal{H}_{0}^{\ast }(n,e)\supseteq \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ , where the inclusion is strict for infinitely many pairs $(n,e)$ . However, for $r\ge 4$ and $e\gt t_{r-1}(n)$ , every graph in $\mathcal{H}_{0}^{\ast }(n,e)\setminus \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ can be shown to have more $K_r$ ’s than $H^{\ast }(n,e)$ . (Basically, each such graph is obtained from a complete $(k-1)$ -partite graph by adding edges into more than one part and cannot minimise the number of $K_r$ ’s for $r\ge 4$ by Lemma 2.5.)

For the purposes of this paper (namely for Proposition 1.2), only the difference $\mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e)\setminus \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ matters; we use the current definitions merely so that the families $\mathcal{H}_i^{\ast }(n,e)$ and $\mathcal{H}_i(n,e)$ are the same as in [Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9].

The rest of the paper of organised as follows. In the next section, we present some definitions and preliminary results. As a step towards proving Theorem 1.1, we first find extremal graphs in a certain family $\mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$ in Section 3 (see Proposition 3.1 for the exact statement). We derive Theorem 1.1 in Section 4. The proof of Proposition 1.2 is presented in Section 5.

2. Preliminaries

Given $\ell$ pairwise disjoint sets $A_1, \ldots, A_{\ell }$ , we use $K[A_1, \ldots, A_{\ell }]$ to denote the complete $\ell$ -partite graph with parts $A_1, \ldots, A_{\ell }$ ; if we care only about the isomorphism type of this graph (i.e. only the sizes of the parts matter), we may instead write $K_{a_1, \ldots, a_{\ell }}$ , where $a_i\,:\!=\,|A_i|$ for $i\in [\ell ]$ .

Let $G=(V,E)$ be a graph. By $|G|$ we denote the number of edges in $G$ . Let $\overline{G} \,:\!=\, \left (V,\binom{V}{2}\setminus E\right )$ denote the complement of $G$ . The subgraph of $G$ induced by a set $A\subseteq V$ is $G[A]\,:\!=\,\left (A,\binom{A}{2}\cap E\right )$ . For disjoint $A,B\subseteq V$ , we use $G[A,B]$ to denote the induced bipartite graph with parts $A$ and $B$ (which consists of edges connecting $A$ to $B$ ).

In the remainder of this note, we assume unless it is stated otherwise that $r,n,e\in \mathbb N$ satisfy $r\ge 3$ and $e\le \binom{n}{2}$ (and we minimise the number of $r$ -cliques over $(n,e)$ -graphs). Also, $k=k(n,e)$ is defined in (2).

Given a family $\mathcal{F}$ of $(n,e)$ -graphs, we use $\mathcal{F}^{\min }$ to denote the collection of graphs $F \in \mathcal{F}$ with the minimum number of $K_r$ ’s (over all graphs in $\mathcal{F}$ ). For convenience, we set $N(K_0, G) \,:\!=\, 1$ and $N(K_{-1}, G) \,:\!=\, 0$ for all graphs $G$ .

Let the family $\mathcal{H}_{0}(n,e)$ be the collection of all $(n,e)$ -graphs that can be obtained from an $n$ -vertex complete $(k-1)$ -partite graph by adding a (possibly empty) triangle-free graph into each part. It is clear from the definition that $\mathcal{H}_1(n,e) \subseteq \mathcal{H}_{0}(n,e)$ .

The following fact follows from some simple calculations (with the argument for Part (i) being the same as in (10)).

Fact 2.1. Let $k, \boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }, m^{\ast }, H^{\ast }$ , and $h_r^{\ast }(n,e)$ be as defined in Section 1 . Then it holds for all $r \ge 3$ that

  1. (i) $0 \le m^{\ast } \le a_{k-1}^{\ast } - a_{k}^{\ast }$ ,

  2. (ii) $|K_{a_{1}^{\ast }, \ldots, a_{k}^{\ast }}| - |K_{a_{1}^{\ast }, \ldots, a_{k-2}^{\ast }, a_{k-1}^{\ast }+1, a_{k}^{\ast }-1}| = a_{k-1}^{\ast } - a_{k}^{\ast }+1$ ,

  3. (iii) $N(K_r, H^{\ast }) = h^{\ast }_{r}(n,e) \ge g_r(n,e)$ .

We also need the following simple facts for counting $r$ -cliques in some special classes of graphs.

Fact 2.2. Let $G$ be a graph, $S \subseteq V(G)$ be a vertex set, and $\overline{S}\,:\!=\, V(G)\setminus S$ . Suppose that the induced subgraph $G[S]$ is triangle-free, and the induced bipartite graph $G[S,\overline{S}]$ is complete. Then

\begin{align*} N(K_r, G) = |G[S]|\cdot N(K_{r-2}, G[\overline{S}]) + |S|\cdot N(K_{r-1}, G[\overline{S}]) + N(K_{r}, G[\overline{S}]). \end{align*}

Fact 2.3. Suppose that $G$ is a graph obtained from $K[V_1, \ldots, V_{\ell }]$ by adding a triangle-free graph. Let $S\,:\!=\, V_1 \cup V_2$ and $\overline{S} \,:\!=\, V(G)\setminus S$ . Then

\begin{align*} N(K_{r}, G) \ =\ & |G[V_1]|\cdot |G[V_2]|\cdot N(K_{r-4}, G[\overline{S}]) \\ & + \left (|G[V_1]|\cdot |V_2| + |G[V_2]|\cdot |V_1|\right ) \cdot N(K_{r-3}, G[\overline{S}]) \\ & + |G[S]|\cdot N(K_{r-2}, G[\overline{S}]) + |S|\cdot N(K_{r-1}, G[\overline{S}]) + N(K_{r}, G[\overline{S}]). \end{align*}

Fact 2.4. Let $G$ be a graph, $S \subseteq V(G)$ , and $\overline{S} \,:\!=\, V(G)\setminus S$ . Suppose that the induced subgraph $G[S]$ is $3$ -partite, and the induced bipartite subgraph $G[S, \overline{S}]$ is complete. Then

\begin{align*} N(K_{r}, G) = N(K_3, G[S]) \cdot N(K_{r-3}, G[\overline{S}]) & + |G[S]|\cdot N(K_{r-2}, G[\overline{S}]) \\ & + |S|\cdot N(K_{r-1}, G[\overline{S}]) + N(K_{r}, G[\overline{S}]). \end{align*}

We will also use the following results.

Lemma 2.5. Let $r\ge 4$ and let $n,e\in \mathbb{N}$ satisfy $t_{r-1}(n)\lt e\le \binom{n}{2}$ . Suppose that $G \in \mathcal{H}^{\min }_{0}(n,e)$ is a graph with a vertex partition $V(G) = B_1\cup \ldots \cup B_{k-1}$ such that $G$ is the union of $K[B_1, \ldots, B_{k-1}]$ with a triangle-free graph. Then $G$ contains at most one part $B_i$ which is partially full, meaning that $0 \lt |G[B_i]|\lt t_{2}(|B_i|)$ .

Proof. Suppose to the contrary that $G$ contains two partially full parts $B_i$ and $B_j$ for some $1 \le i \lt j \le k-1$ . Let $x\,:\!=\, |G[B_i]|$ , $\sigma \,:\!=\, |G[B_i]|+|G[B_j]|$ and $H\,:\!=\,G[V(G)\setminus (B_i\cup B_j)]$ . Observe from Fact 2.3 that there exist constants $C_2, C_3, C_4$ depending on $|B_i|$ , $|B_j|$ and $H$ (but not on $x$ ) such that

\begin{align*} N(K_r, G) = N(K_{r-4},H)\cdot x(\sigma -x) + C_2 x + C_3 (\sigma -x) + C_4 =\!: \,P(x). \end{align*}

Let $G_i$ be the graph obtained from $G$ by moving one edge from $G[B_j]$ to $G[B_i]$ and rearranging the latter graph to be still $K_3$ -free, which is possible by Mantel’s theorem. Similarly, let $G_j$ be the graph obtained from $G$ by moving one edge from $G[B_i]$ to $G[B_j]$ . Note that $N(K_r, G_i) = P(x+1)$ and $N(K_r, G_j) = P(x-1)$ . Since $e> t_{r-1}(n)$ , we have

(6) \begin{equation} P(x+1) + P(x-1) - 2P(x) = - 2 N(K_{r-4},H) \lt 0. \end{equation}

Thus $\min \left \{N(K_r, G_i), N(K_r, G_j)\right \} \lt N(K_r, G)$ , contradicting the minimality of $G$ .

The following simple inequality from [Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9] will be useful. For completeness, we include its short proof here.

Lemma 2.6 ([Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9, Lemma 4.5]). For all integers $a\ge 1$ , $k \ge 2$ , and $n \ge ak$ , we have

(7) \begin{align} a(n-a)+t_{k-1}(n-a)\gt (a-1)(n-a+1)+t_{k-1}(n-a+1). \end{align}

Proof. Let $a_1 \ge \dots \ge a_{k-1}$ denote the part sizes of $T_{k-1}(n-a)$ . If we increase its number of vertices by one, then the part sizes of the new Turán graph, up to reordering, can be obtained by increasing $a_{k-1}$ by one. Thus the difference between the expressions in (7) is

(8) \begin{align} |K_{a_1, \ldots, a_{k-1},a}| - |K_{a_1, \ldots, a_{k-2},a_{k-1}+1, a-1}| = a_{k-1}a-(a_{k-1}+1)(a-1) = a_{k-1}-a+1, \end{align}

which is positive since $a_{k-1} \ge \left \lfloor (n-a)/(k-1)\right \lfloor \ge \left \lfloor (ak-a)/(k-1)\right \rfloor = a$ .

3. Extremal graphs in $\mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$

As an intermediate step towards Theorem 1.1, we will first prove the following result, which determines the extremal graphs in $\mathcal{H}_{0}(n,e)$ .

Proposition 3.1. For all integers $n \ge r\ge 4$ and $t_{r-1}(n)\lt e\le \binom{n}{2}$ , we have that $\mathcal{H}^{\min }_{0}(n,e) = \mathcal{H}^{\ast }_{1}(n,e)$ .

We will use this result later to prove Theorem 1.1 by induction on the number of parts in a graph in $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ . Note that, in general, neither $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ nor $\mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$ is a subfamily of the other. However, when we work on the structure of extremal graphs in $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ in the proof of Theorem 1.1, some intermediate graphs may be in $\mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$ .

We need some further preliminaries before we can prove Proposition 3.1.

Given a graph $G \in \mathcal{H}^{\min }_{0}(n,e)$ with partition $B_1, \ldots, B_{k-1}$ , we apply the following modification to $G$ to obtain a new graph $H^{\prime}= H^{\prime}(G) \in \mathcal{H}^{\min }_{0}(n,e)$ . Note that, in fact, these steps do not depend on $r$ .

  1. Step 1: If there is a part $B_i$ that is partially full in $G$ , then let $B\,:\!=\, B_i$ (by Lemma 2.5, such $B_i$ is unique if it exists). Otherwise, take an arbitrary $i\in [k-1]$ with $|G[B_i]| = t_2(|B_i|)$ and let $B\,:\!=\, B_i$ . Since $|G| \gt t_{k-1}(n)$ , $|G[B_i]|$ cannot be $0$ for all $i \in [k-1]$ . Thus, the set $B$ is well-defined.

  2. Step 2: Note that $G-B$ is a complete multipartite graph. Let $A_1, \ldots, A_{t-2}$ denote its parts. Let $a_i \,:\!=\, |A_i|$ for $i\in [t-2]$ and assume that $a_1 \ge \dots \ge a_{t-2}$ . Note that each original part $B_\ell$ is either $B$ , some $A_i$ , or the union of two parts $A_i$ and $A_j$ .

  3. Step 3: Choose integers $a_{t-1} \ge a_t \ge 1$ such that

    \begin{align*} a_{t-1}+a_{t} = |B| \quad \text{and}\quad (a_{t-1}+1)(a_t-1) \lt |G[B]| \le a_{t-1}a_{t}. \end{align*}
    Note that this is possible by Mantel’s theorem since $G[B]$ is triangle-free. Let $A_{t-1}\sqcup A_t = B$ be a partition with $|A_{t-1}|=a_{t-1}$ and $|A_{t}| = a_t$ . If $|G[B]| = t_2(|B|)$ , then $a_{t-1}=\lceil |B|/2\rceil$ and $a_t=\lfloor |B|/2\rfloor$ and we assume that $A_{t-1}\sqcup A_t = B$ is the original partition of $G[B]$ with the two parts labelled so that $|A_{t-1}|\ge |A_t|$ .
  4. Step 4: Let $H^{\prime}$ be obtained from $K[A_1, \ldots, A_t]$ by removing a star whose centre lies in $A_t$ and $m^{\prime}$ leaves lie in $A_{t-1}$ , where

    (9) \begin{equation} m^{\prime}\,:\!=\, \sum _{ij\in \binom{[t]}{2}}a_ia_j - e = a_{t-1}a_t - |G[B]|. \end{equation}
    This is possible because, by Step 3,
    (10) \begin{align} 0 \le m^{\prime} = a_{t-1}a_t - |G[B]| \le a_{t-1}a_{t} - \left ((a_{t-1}+1)(a_t-1)+1\right ) = a_{t-1}-a_t. \end{align}

Notice that to obtain $H^{\prime}$ we only change the structure of $G$ on $B$ while keeping $|G[B]| = |H^{\prime}[B]|$ . Thus, $H^{\prime}\in \mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$ and, since $G[B, V(G)\setminus B]$ is complete bipartite and $G[B]$ is triangle-free, it follows from Fact 2.2 that $N(K_r, H^{\prime}) = N(K_r, G)$ , and hence, $H^{\prime}\in \mathcal{H}_0^{\min }(n,e)$ .

Lemma 3.2. For all $r\ge 3$ , integers $n$ and $e$ with $t_{r-1}(n)\lt e\le \binom{n}{2}$ and $G\in \mathcal{H}_{0}^{\min }(n,e)$ , the graph $H^{\prime}$ produced by Steps 1–4 above is isomorphic to $H^{\ast }(n,e)$ .

Proof. To prove that $H^{\prime} \cong H^{\ast }(n,e)$ , it suffices to show that $t = k$ and $(|A_1|, \ldots, |A_{t}|) = \boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }$ , where $k$ and $\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }$ are as defined in Section 1.

Claim 3.3. If $m^{\prime}=0$ , then $|H^{\prime}[A_{h}\cup A_{i} \cup A_j]| \gt t_{2}(a_h+a_i+a_j)$ for all $\{h,i,j\}\in \binom{[t]}{3}$ . If $m^{\prime}\gt 0$ , then $|H^{\prime}[A_{h}\cup A_{t-1} \cup A_t]| \gt t_{2}(a_h+a_{t-1}+a_t)$ for all $h\in [t-2]$ .

Proof. Let $S\,:\!=\, A_{h}\cup A_{i} \cup A_j$ , with $\{i,j\}=\{t-1,t\}$ if $m^{\prime}\gt 0$ . Suppose to the contrary that $|H^{\prime}[S]| \le t_{2}(|S|)$ . Then let $G_1$ be a new graph obtained from $H^{\prime}$ by replacing $H^{\prime}[S]$ with a bipartite graph of the same size. Note that the induced bipartite graph $H^{\prime}[S, \overline{S}]$ is complete. (Indeed, this is trivially true if $m^{\prime}=0$ as then $H^{\prime} = K[A_{1}, \ldots, A_{t}]$ ; if $m^{\prime}\gt 0$ , then the only non-complete pair is $[A_{t-1}, A_{t}]$ , but both sets lie in $S$ .) Since $H^{\prime}$ is $t$ -partite, the graph $G_1$ is $(t-1)$ -partite (and with at most one non-complete pair of parts). By Steps 2–3, we have $t \le 2(k-1)$ . So we can represent $G_1$ as the union of a complete $(k-1)$ -partite graph and a triangle-free graph, which implies that $G_1 \in \mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$ . It is easy to see from Fact 2.4 that $N(K_r, G_1) \le N(K_r, H^{\prime})$ , since $0 = N(K_3, G_1[S]) \le N(K_3, H^{\prime}[S])$ . So it follows from the minimality of $H^{\prime}$ that $N(K_3, H^{\prime}[S]) = 0$ . If $\{t-1, t\}$ is not a subset of $\{h,i,j\}$ , then $H^{\prime}[S]$ is a complete $3$ -partite graph and contains at least one traingle, contradicting $N(K_3, H^{\prime}[S]) = 0$ . Therefore, $\{t-1, t\} \subseteq \{h,i,j\}$ . By symmetry, we may assume that $\{t-1, t\} = \{i,j\}$ (thus being consistent with our earlier assumption if $m^{\prime}\gt 0$ ). Note that $|H[A_{t-1}, A_{t}]| \ge 1$ , since otherwise, we would have $m^{\prime} \ge a_{t-1}a_{t} \gt a_{t-1}-a_{t}$ , contradicting (10). Note that each edge in $H[A_{t-1}, A_{t}]$ is in $|A_{h}|$ triangles in $H[S]$ , contradicting $N(K_3, H^{\prime}[S]) = 0$ .

Claim 3.4. If $m^{\prime}\gt 0$ , then $a_{t-2} \ge a_{t-1}$ .

Proof. Suppose to the contrary that $a_{t-2} \le a_{t-1}-1$ . Then let $G_2$ be a new graph obtained from $H^{\prime}$ by moving edges from $[A_{t-2}, A_{t}]$ to $[A_{t-1}, A_{t}]$ until this is no longer possible. Let $S\,:\!=\, A_{t-2} \cup A_{t-1} \cup A_{t}$ . If $A_{t-2} \cup A_t$ is an independent set in $G_2$ (i.e. if $m^{\prime} \ge a_{t-2}a_{t}$ ), then $|H^{\prime}[S]| = |G_2[S]| \le t_2(|S|)$ , contradicting Claim 3.3. Thus $G_2[S]$ can be viewed as a graph obtained from $K[A_{t-2}, A_{t-1}, A_{t}]$ by removing $m^{\prime}$ edges from $K[A_{t-2}, A_{t}]$ . So $G_2 \in \mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$ . Note that

\begin{align*} N(K_3, G_2[S]) - N(K_3, H^{\prime}[S]) = m^{\prime}\left (a_{t-2} - a_{t-1}\right ) \lt 0, \end{align*}

which combined with Fact 2.4 implies that $N(K_r, G_2) - N(K_r, H^{\prime})\lt 0$ , contradicting the minimality of $H^{\prime}$ .

If $m^{\prime}\gt 0$ , let $C_i\,:\!=\, A_i$ for $i\in [t]$ . If $m^{\prime}=0$ , let $C_1, \ldots, C_t$ be a relabelling of $A_1, \ldots, A_t$ so that the sizes of the sets are non-increasing. Regardless of the value of $m^{\prime}$ , the following statements clearly hold:

  1. (i) $c_1 \ge \dots \ge c_{t}$ , where $c_i \,:\!=\, |C_i|$ for $i\in [t]$ ,

  2. (ii) $0 \le m^{\prime} \le c_{t-1}-c_{t}$ ,

  3. (iii) Claim 3.3 applies to all triples $\{C_i, C_{t-1}, C_{t}\}$ for $i\in [t-2]$ .

The rest of the proof is written so that it works for both $m^{\prime}=0$ and $m^{\prime}\gt 0$ .

Claim 3.5. We have $c_1 \le c_{t-1} + 1$ .

Proof. Let $S\,:\!=\, C_1 \cup C_{t-1} \cup C_{t}$ . Note that

\begin{align*} |K_{c_1-1, c_{t-1}+1, c_{t}}| - |H^{\prime}[S]| = m^{\prime} - c_{t-1}+c_1-1 =\!: \,m^{\prime\prime}. \end{align*}

Suppose to the contrary that $c_1 \ge c_{t-1}+2$ . Then $m^{\prime\prime} \ge m^{\prime}+1$ . Take a partition $C^{\prime}_{1} \cup C^{\prime}_{t-1} \cup C^{\prime}_{t} = S$ of sizes $c_1-1, c_{t-1}+1, c_{t}$ , respectively. Let $H_{S}$ be the graph obtained from $K[C^{\prime}_{1}, C^{\prime}_{t-1}, C^{\prime}_{t}]$ by removing $m^{\prime\prime}$ edges between $C^{\prime}_{t-1}$ and $C^{\prime}_{t}$ . This is possible since $m^{\prime\prime} \le (c_{t-1}+1)c_{t}$ . (Indeed, otherwise $|H^{\prime}[S]| \le (c_1-1)(c_{t-1}+c_{t}+1) \le t_{2}(|S|)$ , contradicting Claim 3.3.) We have $|H_{S}| = |H^{\prime}[S]|$ . Let $H^{\prime\prime}$ be the graph obtained from $H^{\prime}$ by replacing $H^{\prime}[S]$ with $H_{S}$ . Note that $H^{\prime\prime} \in \mathcal{H}_{0}(n,e)$ . It follows from $m^{\prime} \le c_{t-1}-c_{t}$ that

\begin{eqnarray*} N(K_3, H^{\prime}[S]) - N(K_3, H^{\prime\prime}[S]) & =& \left (c_1c_{t-1}c_{t} - m^{\prime}c_1\right ) \\ & -& \left ((c_1-1)(c_{t-1}+1)c_{t} - (m^{\prime}-c_{t-1}+c_1-1)(c_1-1)\right ) \\ & \ge & (c_1 - c_{t})(c_1-c_{t-1}-2)+1 \ \ge 1, \end{eqnarray*}

which combined with Fact 2.4 implies that $N(K_r, H^{\prime}) - N(K_r, H^{\prime\prime}) \gt 0$ , contradicting the minimality of $H^{\prime}$ .

Claim 3.6. We have $t = k$ .

Proof. It suffices to show that $t_{t-1}(n)\lt e \le t_{t}(n)$ . The upper bound $e \le t_{t}(n)$ is trivial, since $H^{\prime}$ is $t$ -partite. So it remains to show that $e \gt t_{t-1}(n)$ . Let $T\,:\!=\, H^{\prime}[C_1 \cup \dots \cup C_{t-1}]$ . It follows from Claim 3.5 that $T \cong T_{t-1}(n-c_t)$ . Therefore,

(11) \begin{align} |H^{\prime}| - t_{t-1}(n-c_t) = |H^{\prime}\setminus T| = c_{t}(n-c_t) - m^{\prime}. \end{align}

On the other hand, by viewing $T_{t-1}(n)$ as a graph obtained from $T_{t-1}(n-c_t)$ by adding $c_t$ new vertices into some parts, we obtain

\begin{align*} t_{t-1}(n) - t_{t-1}(n-c_t) \le c_{t}(n-c_{t-1}-1). \end{align*}

By combining these two inequalities, we obtain

\begin{align*} |H^{\prime}|-t_{t-1}(n) \ge c_{t}(c_{t-1}+1-c_{t}) - m^{\prime} \ge (c_t-1)(c_{t-1}-c_t)+c_t \gt 0, \end{align*}

proving that $e \gt t_{t-1}(n)$ .

Claim 3.7. The sequence $\left (|C_1|, \ldots, |C_{k}|\right )$ of part sizes is equal to $\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast } = \boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }(n,e)$ .

Proof. Recall that $t=k$ and, by (11), we have that

(12) \begin{align} |H^{\prime}| - t_{k-1}(n-c_k) = c_k(n-c_k) - m^{\prime} \le c_k (n-c_k). \end{align}

Let us show that $c_k$ is the smallest nonnegative integer $a$ satisfying

\begin{equation*} f(a)\,:\!=\, a(n-a) + t_{k-1}(n-a) \ge e. \end{equation*}

This inequality holds for $a=c_k$ by (12). Note that $c_k \le n/k$ as it is the smallest among $c_1 + \dots + c_k = n$ . Thus, by Lemma 2.6, it is enough to check that $a=c_k-1$ violates this condition. Notice that

\begin{align*} f(c_k-1) - f(c_k) \le 2c_{k}-n-1 + (n-c_k-c_{k-1}) = c_k - c_{k-1} - 1. \end{align*}

Therefore, it follows from $m^{\prime} \le c_{k-1}-c_{k}$ that

\begin{align*} f(c_k-1) \le f(c_k) - (m^{\prime}+1) \le |H^{\prime}| + m^{\prime} -(m^{\prime}+1) \lt |H^{\prime}|, \end{align*}

as desired.

Thus $c_k=a_k^{\ast }$ and (since $t=k$ by Claim 3.6) we have $(c_1,\dots, c_k)=\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }$ by Claim 3.5, as desired.

Also, it follows from the definitions that $m^{\prime} = m^{\ast }$ and thus $H^{\prime}$ is isomorphic to $H^{\ast }(n,e)$ . This completes the proof of Lemma 3.2.

Now we are ready to prove Proposition 3.1.

Proof of Proposition 3.1. Let $G\in \mathcal{H}^{\min }_{0}(n,e)$ be arbitrary. Let $B_1, \ldots, B_{k-1}$ be a vertex partition such that $G$ is the union of $K[B_1, \ldots, B_{k-1}]$ with a triangle-free graph $J$ . Let $b_i\,:\!=\, |B_i|$ for $i\in [k-1]$ . Apply Steps 1–4 to $G$ to obtain a $k$ -partite graph $H^{\prime}$ with parts $A_1, \ldots, A_{k}$ . By Lemma 3.2, we have $H^{\prime} \cong H^{\ast } \,:\!=\, H^{\ast }(n,e)$ . Assume that $|A_i| = a^{\ast }_i$ for $i\in [k]$ and that all missing edges of $H^{\prime}$ (if any exist) go between $A_{k-1}$ and $A_{k}$ .

The following claim follows from the definitions of Steps 1–4.

Claim 3.8. If $i\in [k-1]$ satisfies $|G[B_i]| \in \left \{0, t_{2}(b_i)\right \}$ , then $H^{\prime}[B_i] = G[B_i]$ .

Since $H^{\prime}$ is $k$ -partite, it follows from the definitions of Steps 1–4 that exactly one part $B_p$ of $G$ is divided into $A_q \cup A_s$ in Steps 2–3, where, say, $1\le q \lt s \le k$ , while the remaining parts of $G$ correspond to the remaining parts of $H^{\prime}$ . In particular, $b_p = a_{q}^{\ast } + a_{s}^{\ast }$ .

Claim 3.9. We have $|G[B_p]|\gt 0$ .

Proof. It follows from $m^{\ast } \le a_{k-1}^{\ast } - a_{k}^{\ast }$ that

\begin{align*} |H^{\prime}[B_p]| = a_{q}^{\ast } a_{s}^{\ast } - m^{\ast } \ge a_{q}^{\ast } a_{s}^{\ast } - (a_{k-1}^{\ast } - a_{k}^{\ast }) \gt 0. \end{align*}

Combined with Claim 3.8, we see that $|G[B_p]|\gt 0$ .

Suppose first that $m^{\ast } = 0$ . Then $H^{\prime} = K[A_1, \ldots, A_{k}]$ , and $G$ can be obtained from $H^{\prime}$ by replacing $H^{\prime}[A_{q}\cup A_{s}]$ with $G[B_p]$ . Moreover, $G[B_{p}]$ is a triangle-free graph with $a^{\ast }_{q} + a^{\ast }_{s}$ vertices and $a^{\ast }_{q} a^{\ast }_{s}$ edges. If $a^{\ast }_{s} = a^{\ast }_{k}$ , then it follows from the definition of $\mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ that $G \in \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ . Otherwise, $|a^{\ast }_{q} - a^{\ast }_{s}| \le 1$ (by the definition of $\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }$ ), and hence, $G[B_p]\cong T_{2}(a^{\ast }_{q} + a^{\ast }_{s})$ . This implies that $G$ does not contain any partially full part, and hence, $G = H^{\prime} \in \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ .

Suppose that $m^{\ast } \gt 0$ . Since $G[A_i,A_j]$ is complete for all $\{i,j\} \neq \{q,s\}$ and $H^{\prime}[A_i,A_j]$ is complete iff $\{i,j\} \neq \{k-1, k\}$ , we have $\{q,s\} = \{k-1, k\}$ . Thus $G$ can be obtained from $K[A_1, \ldots, A_{k}]$ by replacing $K[A_{k-1} \cup A_k]$ with a triangle-free graph with $a^{\ast }_{k-1}a^{\ast }_k - m^{\ast }$ edges. This gives $G \in \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ . We conclude that $\mathcal{H}^{\min }_{0}(n,e) \subseteq \mathcal{H}^{\ast }_{1}(n,e)$ . Since $\mathcal{H}^{\ast }_{1}(n,e) \subseteq \mathcal{H}_0(n,e)$ and every graph in $\mathcal{H}^{\ast }_{1}(n,e)$ contains the same number of $K_r$ ’s, we have $\mathcal{H}^{\min }_{0}(n,e) = \mathcal{H}^{\ast }_{1}(n,e)$ .

4. Proof of Theorem 1.1

With Proposition 3.1 in hand, we are now ready to prove Theorem 1.1.

Proof of Theorem 1.1. Fix integers $n \ge r \ge 3$ and $e \le \binom{n}{2}$ . Notice that (4) can be reduced to $\min \big \{N(K_r, G)\,\colon\, G\in \mathcal{K}(n,e)\big \} \ge h_{r}^{\ast }(n,e)$ , since the other direction is trivially true. Suppose that $G \in \mathcal{K}^{\min }(n,e)$ is a graph obtained from a complete $\ell$ -partite graph by adding a triangle-free graph to one part. We aim to show that $N(K_r, G) \ge h_{r}^{\ast }(n,e)$ when $r\ge 3$ and, in addition, $G \in \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ when $r \ge 4$ and $e\gt t_{r-1}(n)$ . We prove this statement by induction on $\ell + r$ . Notice that if $\ell = k-1$ (where $k= k(n,e)$ ) and $r \ge 4$ , then $G \in \mathcal{H}_{0}(n,e)$ , and it follows from Proposition 3.1 that $G \in \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ , as desired. If $\ell = k-1$ and $r=3$ , then $G \in \mathcal{H}_{0}(n,e)$ , and it follows from [Reference Liu, Pikhurko and Staden9, Proposition 1.5] that $N(K_3, G) \ge h_{3}^{\ast }(n,e)$ . So the statement is true for all pairs $(\ell, r)$ with $\ell = k-1$ and $r\ge 3$ , and this serves as our base case.

Assume that $\ell \ge k$ and $r \ge 3$ . Let $U_1 \cup \dots \cup U_{\ell } = V(G)$ be a partition such that $G$ is obtained from the complete $\ell$ -partite graph $K[U_1, \ldots, U_{\ell }]$ by adding a triangle-free graph into $U_{\ell }$ . We can assume that $U_{\ell }$ is not an independent set (otherwise consider instead the $(\ell -1)$ -partition of $V(G)$ where $U_{\ell -1}$ and $U_\ell$ are merged together).

First, we prove (4). Assume that $\ell \ge r-1$ , as otherwise $h_r^{\ast }(n,e)=0$ and there is nothing to do. Note that $U_{\ell }$ is as large as any other part: if some part $U_i$ has strictly larger size then by moving all edges from $U_\ell$ to $U_i$ (by $|U_i|\gt |U_\ell |$ there is enough space for this) we strictly decrease the number of $r$ -cliques (since $\ell \ge r-1$ ), a contradiction. By relabelling parts $U_1, \ldots, U_{\ell -1}$ , we may assume that $U_{1}$ is of smallest size among $U_1, \ldots, U_{\ell -1}$ . Let $\hat{G}$ denote the induced subgraph of $G$ on $U_2 \cup \dots \cup U_{\ell }$ . Let $\hat{n} \,:\!=\, n-|U_{1}|$ and $\hat{e} \,:\!=\, |\hat{G}|$ . Let $\hat{k} \,:\!=\, k(\hat{n}, \hat{e})$ be as defined in (2) (while we reserve $k$ for $k(n,e)$ ).

Claim 4.1. We have $\hat{k} \le k$ .

Proof. Let $H^{\ast } = H^{\ast }(n,e)$ be the $k$ -partite graph as defined in Section 1. Assume that $A_1^{\ast }, \ldots, A_{k}^{\ast }$ are the corresponding parts of $H^{\ast }$ of sizes $a_1^{\ast } \ge \dots \ge a_{k}^{\ast }$ , respectively. It is clear that $|A_1^{\ast }| \ge \frac{n}{k}$ . It follows from the minimality of $U_{1}$ that $|U_{1}| \le \frac{n-|U_{\ell }|}{\ell -1} \le \frac{n}{k} \le |A_1^{\ast }|$ . Let $W_1 \subseteq A_1^{\ast }$ be a set of size $|U_1|$ and let $H^{\prime}$ be the induced subgraph of $H^{\ast }$ on $V(H)\setminus W_1$ . Observe that $H^{\prime}$ is still a $k$ -partite graph and $|H^{\prime}| \ge |\hat{G}|$ . So it follows from the definition that $\hat{k} \le k$ .

Note that $\hat{G}$ can be viewed as a graph obtained from a complete $(\ell -1)$ -partite graph by adding a triangle-free graph into one part; in particular, $\hat{G}\in \mathcal{K}(\hat{n},\hat{e})$ . Let $\hat{H}$ be $H^{\ast }(\hat{n}, \hat{e})$ and let $G^{\prime}$ be the graph obtained from $G$ by replacing $\hat{G}$ with $\hat{H}$ . It follows from the inductive hypothesis that

\begin{align*} N(K_r, \hat{H}) = h_{r}^{\ast }(\hat{n},\hat{e}) \le N(K_r, \hat{G}) \quad \text{and}\quad N(K_{r-1}, \hat{H}) \le N(K_{r-1}, \hat{G}). \end{align*}

Hence,

\begin{align*} h_{r}^{\ast }(n,e) \le N(K_r, G^{\prime}) & = N(K_r, \hat{H}) + |U_1| \cdot N(K_{r-1}, \hat{H}) \\ & \le N(K_r, \hat{G}) + |U_1| \cdot N(K_{r-1}, \hat{G}) = N(K_r, G), \end{align*}

finishing the inductive step for proving (4).

Now suppose that $r \ge 4$ and $e\gt t_{r-1}(n)$ , and suppose for contradiction that $G\not \in \mathcal{H}_1^{\ast }(n,e)$ . Reusing the notation introduced above, let us first derive a contradiction from assuming that $\hat{G} \not \in \mathcal{H}_1^{\ast }(\hat{n}, \hat{e})$ .

If $\hat{e} \gt t_{r-1}(\hat{n})$ , then it follows from the inductive hypothesis that

\begin{align*} N(K_r, \hat{H}) \lt N(K_r, \hat{G}) \quad \text{and}\quad N(K_{r-1}, \hat{H}) \le N(K_{r-1}, \hat{G}). \end{align*}

Therefore,

(13) \begin{align} N(K_r, G^{\prime}) & = N(K_r, \hat{H}) + |U_1| \cdot N(K_{r-1}, \hat{H}) \notag \\ & \lt N(K_r, \hat{G}) + |U_1| \cdot N(K_{r-1}, \hat{G}) = N(K_r, G),\end{align}

contradicting the minimality of $G$ .

So suppose that $\hat{e} \le t_{r-1}(\hat{n})$ . We have that $\ell \ge k \ge r$ . Recall that $\hat{G}$ is a graph obtained from an $(\ell -1)$ -partite graph by adding a non-empty triangle-free graph. Thus, we have $N(K_r, \hat{H}) = 0 \lt N(K_r, \hat{G})$ . In addition, by (4), we have $N(K_{r-1}, \hat{H}) = h_{r-1}^{\ast }(\hat{n}, \hat{e}) \le N(K_{r-1}, \hat{G})$ . But then the same calculation as in (13) gives a contradiction to the minimality of $G$ .

Thus we have that $\hat{G} \in \mathcal{H}_1^{\ast }(\hat{n}, \hat{e})$ . Let $\hat{A}_1^{\ast } \cup \ldots \cup \hat{A}_{\hat{k}}^{\ast } = V(\hat{G})$ be the partition of $\hat{G}$ as in the definition of $\mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(\hat{n},\hat{e})$ . Let $B_1 \,:\!=\, U_1 \cup \hat{A}_1^{\ast }$ , $B_i \,:\!=\, \hat{A}_i^{\ast }$ for $2\le i\le \hat{k}-2$ , and $B_{\hat{k}-1}\,:\!=\,\hat{A}_{\hat{k}-1}\cup \hat{A}_{\hat{k}}$ . We can view $G$ as a graph obtained from $K[B_1, \ldots, B_{\hat{k}-1}]$ by adding triangle-free graphs into two parts, namely $G[B_1]$ and $G[B_{\hat{k}-1}]$ . Since $\hat{k} \le k$ by Claim 4.1, it holds that $G \in \mathcal{H}_{0}(n,e)$ . Therefore, it follows from Proposition 3.1 that $G \in \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ , finishing the proof of Theorem 1.1.

Let us remark that if we replace the family $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ in Theorem 1.1 by the larger family $\mathcal{K}^{\prime}(n,e)$ that consists of all graphs obtained from a complete partite graph by adding a triangle-free graph (that is, we allow to add edges into more than one part) then the theorem will remain true. Indeed, for $r\ge 4$ , the proof of Lemma 2.5 (which in fact works for any number of parts) shows that every extremal graph $\mathcal{K}^{\prime}(n,e)$ has at most one partially full part and thus belongs to $\mathcal{K}(n,e)$ . For $r=3$ , the equality in (4), will also remain true (again by the proof of Lemma 2.5 except the inequality in (6) becomes equality).

5. Proof of Proposition 1.2

Proof of Proposition 1.2. First, we prove that $N(K_r, H) = h_{r}^{\ast }(n,e)$ for all $H\in \mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e)$ . Fix $H \in \mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e)$ .

First consider the case when $(|A_1|,\dots, |A_k|)=\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }$ , where the sets $A_1,\dots, A_k$ are as in the definition of $\mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e)$ . Let $K \,:\!=\, K[A_1, \ldots, A_k]$ , and $m_i^{\ast } \,:\!=\, |\overline{H}[B_i, A_i]|$ for $i\in I\,:\!=\, \left \{j \in [k-1]\,\colon\, |A_j| = |A_{k-1}|\right \}$ . Note from the definition of $I$ that for all $i\in I$ , we have that

\begin{align*} N(K_{r-2}, K[A_1, \ldots, A_{i-1}, A_{i+1}, \dots, A_{k-1}]) = N(K_{r-2}, K[A_1, \ldots, A_{k-2}]), \end{align*}

because we count $r$ -cliques in two isomorphic graphs. Therefore,

(14) \begin{align} N(K_r, K) - N(K_r, H) & = \sum _{i\in I}m_i^{\ast } \cdot N(K_{r-2}, K[A_1, \ldots, A_{i-1}, A_{i+1}, \dots, A_{k-1}]) \notag \\ & = \sum _{i\in I}m_i^{\ast } \cdot N(K_{r-2}, K[A_1, \ldots, A_{k-2}]) \notag \\ & = m^{\ast } \cdot N(K_{r-2}, K[A_1, \ldots, A_{k-2}]) = N(K_r, K) - N(K_r, H^{\ast }). \end{align}

It follows that $N(K_r, H) = N(K_r, H^{\ast }) = h^{\ast }(n,e)$ , as desired.

Now suppose that $(|A_1|,\dots, |A_k|)\not =\boldsymbol{a}^{\ast }$ . Recall that then $m^{\ast } = 0$ , $(|A_{1}|, \ldots, |A_{k}|) = (a_{2}^{\ast }, \ldots, a_{k-1}^{\ast }, a_{1}^{\ast }-1, a_{k}^{\ast }+1)$ , $m = a_{1}^{\ast } - a_{k}^{\ast } +1$ , and $H$ is a graph obtained from $K[A_1, \ldots, A_{k}]$ by removing some $m$ edges. We may assume that these $m$ edges were removed from parts $[A_{k-1}, A_{k}]$ , since this does not affect the value of $N(K_r, H)$ by the calculation in (14). Now, by viewing $H$ as a graph obtained from $K[A_{1}, \ldots, A_{k}]$ by replacing $K[A_{k-1}, A_k]$ with a triangle-free graph, we see that $H \in \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ , and hence, $N(K_r, H) = h^{\ast }(n,e)$ .

Next, we show that there are infinitely many pairs $(n,e) \in \mathbb{N}^2$ with $t_{r-1}(n) \lt e \le \binom{n}{2}$ such that $\mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e) \setminus \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e) \neq \emptyset$ . It is enough to chose $(n,e)$ so that $a_{k-2}^{\ast }=a_{k-1}^{\ast }$ and $m^{\ast },a_k^{\ast }\ge 2$ ; the choice that we use (in (15) below) is rather arbitrary.

Take any integers $p \ge r-1$ , $q \ge 100$ , and $2 \le m \le q$ . Let $n \,:\!=\, 2pq+ q$ and $e \,:\!=\, \binom{p}{2}(2q)^2 + 2pq^2 - m$ . Note that $e+m$ is the number of edges in the complete $(p+1)$ -partite graph $K_{2q,\dots, 2q,q}$ with $p$ parts of size $2q$ and one part of size $q$ . The choice of $(p,q,m)$ ensures that

\begin{align*} e=\binom{p}{2}(2q)^2 + 2pq^2 - m \gt \binom{p}{2}\left (\frac{2pq+q}{p}\right )^2 \ge t_{p}(n). \end{align*}

By $e< e+m\le t_{p+1}(n)$ , we have that $k(n,e) = p$ .

Let us show that $a_{p}^{\ast } = q$ . By Lemma 2.6, it is enough to show that $(q-1)(n-q-1)+t_{k-1}(n-q-1)\lt e$ . The left-hand side here is the size of the graph obtained from the complete partite graph $K_{2q,\dots, 2q,q}$ by moving a vertex from the part of size $q$ into one of size $2q$ . This results in losing $q+1\gt m$ edges, giving the required. Thus,

(15) \begin{align} a_1^{\ast } = \dots = a^{\ast }_{p-1} = 2q, \quad a_{p}^{\ast } = q, \quad \text{and}\quad m^{\ast } = m. \end{align}

Let $V_1 \cup \dots \cup V_{p+1} = [n]$ be a partition such that $|V_1| = \dots = |V_p| = 2q$ and $|V_{p+1}|=q$ . Fix $m$ distinct vertices $v_1, \ldots, v_m \in V_{p+1}$ , and choose a vertex $u_i \in V_i$ for every $i\in [m]$ . Let $G$ be the graph obtained from $K[V_1, \ldots, V_{p-1}]$ by removing pairs in $\{\{v_i, u_i\}\,\colon\, i\in [m]\}$ . It is easy to see that $G \in \mathcal{H}_{2}^{\ast }(n,e) \setminus \mathcal{H}_{1}^{\ast }(n,e)$ , proving Proposition 1.2.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the anonymous referee for helpful comments.

Funding

Research was supported by ERC Advanced Grant 101020255 and Leverhulme Research Project Grant RPG-2018-424.

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