100 research outputs found

    Balances and Abelian Complexity of a Certain Class of Infinite Ternary Words

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    A word uu defined over an alphabet A\mathcal{A} is cc-balanced (c∈Nc\in\mathbb{N}) if for all pairs of factors vv, ww of uu of the same length and for all letters a∈Aa\in\mathcal{A}, the difference between the number of letters aa in vv and ww is less or equal to cc. In this paper we consider a ternary alphabet A={L,S,M}\mathcal{A}=\{L,S,M\} and a class of substitutions ϕp\phi_p defined by ϕp(L)=LpS\phi_p(L)=L^pS, ϕp(S)=M\phi_p(S)=M, ϕp(M)=Lp−1S\phi_p(M)=L^{p-1}S where p>1p>1. We prove that the fixed point of ϕp\phi_p, formally written as ϕp∞(L)\phi_p^\infty(L), is 3-balanced and that its Abelian complexity is bounded above by the value 7, regardless of the value of pp. We also show that both these bounds are optimal, i.e. they cannot be improved.Comment: 26 page

    Avoiding Abelian powers in binary words with bounded Abelian complexity

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    The notion of Abelian complexity of infinite words was recently used by the three last authors to investigate various Abelian properties of words. In particular, using van der Waerden's theorem, they proved that if a word avoids Abelian kk-powers for some integer kk, then its Abelian complexity is unbounded. This suggests the following question: How frequently do Abelian kk-powers occur in a word having bounded Abelian complexity? In particular, does every uniformly recurrent word having bounded Abelian complexity begin in an Abelian kk-power? While this is true for various classes of uniformly recurrent words, including for example the class of all Sturmian words, in this paper we show the existence of uniformly recurrent binary words, having bounded Abelian complexity, which admit an infinite number of suffixes which do not begin in an Abelian square. We also show that the shift orbit closure of any infinite binary overlap-free word contains a word which avoids Abelian cubes in the beginning. We also consider the effect of morphisms on Abelian complexity and show that the morphic image of a word having bounded Abelian complexity has bounded Abelian complexity. Finally, we give an open problem on avoidability of Abelian squares in infinite binary words and show that it is equivalent to a well-known open problem of Pirillo-Varricchio and Halbeisen-Hungerb\"uhler.Comment: 16 pages, submitte

    Abelian Complexity of Infinite Words Associated with Quadratic Parry Numbers

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    We derive an explicit formula for the Abelian complexity of infinite words associated with quadratic Parry numbers.Comment: 12 page

    Relations on words

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    In the first part of this survey, we present classical notions arising in combinatorics on words: growth function of a language, complexity function of an infinite word, pattern avoidance, periodicity and uniform recurrence. Our presentation tries to set up a unified framework with respect to a given binary relation. In the second part, we mainly focus on abelian equivalence, kk-abelian equivalence, combinatorial coefficients and associated relations, Parikh matrices and MM-equivalence. In particular, some new refinements of abelian equivalence are introduced

    Overlap-Free Words and Generalizations

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    The study of combinatorics on words dates back at least to the beginning of the 20th century and the work of Axel Thue. Thue was the first to give an example of an infinite word over a three letter alphabet that contains no squares (identical adjacent blocks) xx. This result was eventually used to solve some longstanding open problems in algebra and has remarkable connections to other areas of mathematics and computer science as well. This thesis will consider several different generalizations of Thue's work. In particular we shall study the properties of infinite words avoiding various types of repetitions. In Chapter 1 we introduce the theory of combinatorics on words. We present the basic definitions and give an historical survey of the area. In Chapter 2 we consider the work of Thue in more detail. We present various well-known properties of the Thue-Morse word and give some generalizations. We examine Fife's characterization of the infinite overlap-free words and give a simpler proof of this result. We also present some applications to transcendental number theory, generalizing a classical result of Mahler. In Chapter 3 we generalize a result of Seebold by showing that the only infinite 7/3-power-free binary words that can be obtained by iterating a morphism are the Thue-Morse word and its complement. In Chapter 4 we continue our study of overlap-free and 7/3-power-free words. We discuss the squares that can appear as subwords of these words. We also show that it is possible to construct infinite 7/3-power-free binary words containing infinitely many overlaps. In Chapter 5 we consider certain questions of language theory. In particular, we examine the context-freeness of the set of words containing overlaps. We show that over a three-letter alphabet, this set is not context-free, and over a two-letter alphabet, we show that this set cannot be unambiguously context-free. In Chapter 6 we construct infinite words over a four-letter alphabet that avoid squares in any arithmetic progression of odd difference. Our constructions are based on properties of the paperfolding words. We use these infinite words to construct non-repetitive tilings of the integer lattice. In Chapter 7 we consider approximate squares rather than squares. We give constructions of infinite words that avoid such approximate squares. In Chapter 8 we conclude the work and present some open problems

    On the k-Abelian Equivalence Relation of Finite Words

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    This thesis is devoted to the so-called k-abelian equivalence relation of sequences of symbols, that is, words. This equivalence relation is a generalization of the abelian equivalence of words. Two words are abelian equivalent if one is a permutation of the other. For any positive integer k, two words are called k-abelian equivalent if each word of length at most k occurs equally many times as a factor in the two words. The k-abelian equivalence defines an equivalence relation, even a congruence, of finite words. A hierarchy of equivalence classes in between the equality relation and the abelian equivalence of words is thus obtained. Most of the literature on the k-abelian equivalence deals with infinite words. In this thesis we consider several aspects of the equivalence relations, the main objective being to build a fairly comprehensive picture on the structure of the k-abelian equivalence classes themselves. The main part of the thesis deals with the structural aspects of k-abelian equivalence classes. We also consider aspects of k-abelian equivalence in infinite words. We survey known characterizations of the k-abelian equivalence of finite words from the literature and also introduce novel characterizations. For the analysis of structural properties of the equivalence relation, the main tool is the characterization by the rewriting rule called the k-switching. Using this rule it is straightforward to show that the language comprised of the lexicographically least elements of the k-abelian equivalence classes is regular. Further word-combinatorial analysis of the lexicographically least elements leads us to describe the deterministic finite automata recognizing this language. Using tools from formal language theory combined with our analysis, we give an optimal expression for the asymptotic growth rate of the number of k-abelian equivalence classes of length n over an m-letter alphabet. Explicit formulae are computed for small values of k and m, and these sequences appear in Sloane’s Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. Due to the fact that the k-abelian equivalence relation is a congruence of the free monoid, we study equations over the k-abelian equivalence classes. The main result in this setting is that any system of equations of k-abelian equivalence classes is equivalent to one of its finite subsystems, i.e., the monoid defined by the k-abelian equivalence relation possesses the compactness property. Concerning infinite words, we mainly consider the (k-)abelian complexity function. We complete a classification of the asymptotic abelian complexities of pure morphic binary words. In other words, given a morphism which has an infinite binary fixed point, the limit superior asymptotic abelian complexity of the fixed point can be computed (in principle). We also give a new proof of the fact that the k-abelian complexity of a Sturmian word is n + 1 for length n 2k. In fact, we consider several aspects of the k-abelian equivalence relation in Sturmian words using a dynamical interpretation of these words. We reprove the fact that any Sturmian word contains arbitrarily large k-abelian repetitions. The methods used allow to analyze the situation in more detail, and this leads us to define the so-called k-abelian critical exponent which measures the ratio of the exponent and the length of the root of a k-abelian repetition. This notion is connected to a deep number theoretic object called the Lagrange spectrum

    Quaternion Algebras

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    This open access textbook presents a comprehensive treatment of the arithmetic theory of quaternion algebras and orders, a subject with applications in diverse areas of mathematics. Written to be accessible and approachable to the graduate student reader, this text collects and synthesizes results from across the literature. Numerous pathways offer explorations in many different directions, while the unified treatment makes this book an essential reference for students and researchers alike. Divided into five parts, the book begins with a basic introduction to the noncommutative algebra underlying the theory of quaternion algebras over fields, including the relationship to quadratic forms. An in-depth exploration of the arithmetic of quaternion algebras and orders follows. The third part considers analytic aspects, starting with zeta functions and then passing to an idelic approach, offering a pathway from local to global that includes strong approximation. Applications of unit groups of quaternion orders to hyperbolic geometry and low-dimensional topology follow, relating geometric and topological properties to arithmetic invariants. Arithmetic geometry completes the volume, including quaternionic aspects of modular forms, supersingular elliptic curves, and the moduli of QM abelian surfaces. Quaternion Algebras encompasses a vast wealth of knowledge at the intersection of many fields. Graduate students interested in algebra, geometry, and number theory will appreciate the many avenues and connections to be explored. Instructors will find numerous options for constructing introductory and advanced courses, while researchers will value the all-embracing treatment. Readers are assumed to have some familiarity with algebraic number theory and commutative algebra, as well as the fundamentals of linear algebra, topology, and complex analysis. More advanced topics call upon additional background, as noted, though essential concepts and motivation are recapped throughout

    Volume 22

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    J. Edgar Hoover's Power and Influence on the American Social Reality, 1918-1960 by Dorene Asay Wilkinson / Chaconne in D Minor by J.S. Bach by Meggie Aube / The Biggest Fish by Nancy Bishop / the rant: killin' in the name of freedom by jsun parizo / Helaman Ferguson's Mathematical Sculptures by Sarah Piper / A Teaching Method for English Arcticles by Andrew Castro Pongco / The Chess Player by George Wayne Skladel / Honorable Mention / Other PresentersYe
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