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Enumerative combinatorics, graph theory, order theory, posets, matroids, designs and other discrete structures. It also includes algebraic, analytic and probabilistic combinatorics.
9
votes
Accepted
Maximum density of sum-free sets with respect to Knuth's "addition"
Let $a +_K b$ denote Knuth addition. It is easy to check that $a +_K b \equiv a + b$ mod $2$ (in fact mod $4$), so the odd numbers are Knuth-sum-free. On the other hand, note that if $a +_K b = a +_K …
4
votes
Generalization of a mind-boggling box-opening puzzle
This topic is fascinating, but the two specific questions asked are trivial, as indicated in the comment of Peter Taylor. Here is a paraphrase of that comment. The function $W$ has the form $W(a, b) = …
3
votes
Accepted
Is the transpose of an infinite Hadamard matrix also Hadamard?
Define $f_i(n) = (-1)^{b_i(n)}$ where $b_i(n)$ is the $i$th binary digit of $n$ (Speyer's example with $\lambda = e_i$). Then $(f_1, f_2, \dots)$ defines an "infinite Hadamard matrix" because the part …
7
votes
Accepted
Majority voting on $\{0,1\}^\mathbb{Z}$
Observe that, in isolation, (the indicator function of) an arithmetic progression of common difference $2$ and length $N > n$ maps to an arithmetic progression of common difference $2$ and length $N-n …
9
votes
Accepted
Shortest almost trivial element of free group
Repeating from the comments section:
This (natural and beautiful) question was previously asked and answered on this site. See Collapsible group words. It also appeared recently on math.se.
The questi …
5
votes
Must an isomorphism preserving graph transformation preserve the order of the automorphism g...
This is an answer to the follow-up question about automorphisms of a subdivision.
Suppose $G$ is a connected graph which is not $2$-regular. Let $G^{(k)}$ be the $k$-subdivision of $G$, i.e., the gra …
6
votes
Accepted
The growth rate of a commutator set in a non-elementary group
You can take $\kappa(n) = n/2$ if $G$ is not virtually nilpotent of class $\le 2$.
Let $B_n = S^{\le n}$ and $C_n = \{[b_1, b_2] : b_1, b_2 \in B_n\}$. Suppose $|C_n| < n/2$. By pigeonhole there is so …
5
votes
Accepted
A probability problem in the conjugacy classes of symmetric group
Let $kp$ be the size of the support of $\sigma$. Let $1,2,3,4$ be four points of the ground set. The probability that $\sigma_1$ maps $1 \mapsto 2$ is $kp/n(n-1)$, because there is a $kp/n$ chance tha …
28
votes
Function that produces primes
Extended comment, generalizing @IlyaBogdanov's comment about $2n-1$. Fix $n$ and let $$x_m = a(m, n) + n - m - 1.$$ Then $(x_m)$ obeys the similar recurrence
$$
x_m = x_{m-1} + \gcd(x_{m-1}, n-m) - …
2
votes
Algorithm to calculate edge orbits of a graph
Yes your claim is correct for trees. Here is a standard fact about automorphism groups of trees:
Lemma: If $T$ is a finite tree then there is either a vertex or an edge fixed by every automorphism of …
22
votes
Accepted
A rather curious identity on sums over triple binomial terms
Just playing around with it: The RHS multiplied by $n$ is the same as
$$2 \sum_{k=0}^{n-1} \binom{n+1}{k} \binom{n}{k} \binom{n+1}{k+2}.$$
Subtracting this from $n$ times the LHS gives
$$\sum_{k=0}^{n …
10
votes
How many non-isomorphic abelian subgroups of the permutation group $S_n$?
Claim 1: (same as my comment) Let $q_1, \dots, q_k > 1$ be prime powers. Then $G = C_{q_1} \times \cdots \times C_{q_k}$ is isomorphic to a subgroup of $S_n$ if and only if $q_1 + \cdots + q_k \leq n$ …
10
votes
3
answers
918
views
Regular subsets of $\text{PSL}(2, q)$
Suppose a group $G$ acts on a set $\Omega$. Call a subset $A \subset G$ regular (or sharply transitive or simply transitive or...) if for every two points $\omega_1, \omega_2 \in \Omega$ there is a un …
4
votes
Regular subsets of $\text{PSL}(2, q)$
I have come across some references for this problem, which amount to a solution very different from the (beautiful) one given by Peter Mueller, and which also goes further. It turns out that it is pos …
2
votes
Accepted
Lower bound of the probability of singular random matrix over $\{\pm1\}$ in ``Singularity of...
The first two rows are identical with probability $2^{-n}$, so $\mathbb{P}(\det M_n = 0) \geq 2^{-n}$.
Incidentally, there are $2 \times \binom{n}{2}$ events like this to consider, though not quite in …