598 research outputs found
On 3-dimensional lattice walks confined to the positive octant
Many recent papers deal with the enumeration of 2-dimensional walks with
prescribed steps confined to the positive quadrant. The classification is now
complete for walks with steps in : the generating function is
D-finite if and only if a certain group associated with the step set is finite.
We explore in this paper the analogous problem for 3-dimensional walks
confined to the positive octant. The first difficulty is their number: there
are 11074225 non-trivial and non-equivalent step sets in
(instead of 79 in the quadrant case). We focus on the 35548 that have at most
six steps.
We apply to them a combined approach, first experimental and then rigorous.
On the experimental side, we try to guess differential equations. We also try
to determine if the associated group is finite. The largest finite groups that
we find have order 48 -- the larger ones have order at least 200 and we believe
them to be infinite. No differential equation has been detected in those cases.
On the rigorous side, we apply three main techniques to prove D-finiteness.
The algebraic kernel method, applied earlier to quadrant walks, works in many
cases. Certain, more challenging, cases turn out to have a special Hadamard
structure, which allows us to solve them via a reduction to problems of smaller
dimension. Finally, for two special cases, we had to resort to computer algebra
proofs. We prove with these techniques all the guessed differential equations.
This leaves us with exactly 19 very intriguing step sets for which the group
is finite, but the nature of the generating function still unclear.Comment: Final version, to appear in Annals of Combinatorics. 36 page
Avoiding and Enforcing Repetitive Structures in Words
The focus of this thesis is on the study of repetitive structures in words, a central topic in the area of combinatorics on words. The results presented in the thesis at hand are meant to extend and enrich the existing theory concerning the appearance and absence of such structures. In the first part we examine whether these structures necessarily appear in infinite words over a finite alphabet. The repetitive structures we are concerned with involve functional dependencies between the parts that are repeated. In particular, we study avoidability questions of patterns whose repetitive structure is disguised by the application of a permutation. This novel setting exhibits the surprising behaviour that avoidable patterns may become unavoidable in larger alphabets. The second and major part of this thesis deals with equations on words that enforce a certain repetitive structure involving involutions in their solution set. Czeizler et al. (2009) introduced a generalised version of the classical equations u` Æ vmwn that were studied by Lyndon and Schützenberger. We solve the last two remaining and most challenging cases and thereby complete the classification of these equations in terms of the repetitive structures appearing in the admitted solutions. In the final part we investigate the influence of the shuffle operation on words avoiding ordinary repetitions. We construct finite and infinite square-free words that can be shuffled with themselves in a way that preserves squarefreeness. We also show that the repetitive structure obtained by shuffling a word with itself is avoidable in infinite words
Repetitive subwords
The central notionof thisthesisis repetitionsin words. We studyproblemsrelated to contiguous repetitions. More specifically we will consider repeating scattered subwords of non-primitive words, i.e. words which are complete repetitions of other words. We will present inequalities concerning these occurrences as well as giving apartial solutionto an openproblemposedby Salomaaet al. We will characterize languages, whichare closed under the operation ofduplication, thatis repeating any factor of a word. We alsogive newbounds onthe number of occurrencesof certain types of repetitions of words. We give a solution to an open problem posed by Calbrix and Nivat concerning regular languages consisting of non-primitive words. We alsopresentsomeresultsregarding theduplication closureoflanguages,among which a new proof to a problem of Bovet and Varricchio
Quantum Permutation Synchronization
We present QuantumSync, the first quantum algorithm for solving a synchronization problem in the context of computer vision. In particular, we focus on permutation synchronization which involves solving a non-convex optimization problem in discrete variables. We start by formulating synchronization into a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization problem (QUBO). While such formulation respects the binary nature of the problem, ensuring that the result is a set of permutations requires extra care. Hence, we: (i) show how to insert permutation constraints into a QUBO problem and (ii) solve the constrained QUBO problem on the current generation of the adiabatic quantum computers D-Wave. Thanks to the quantum annealing, we guarantee global optimality with high probability while sampling the energy landscape to yield confidence estimates. Our proof-of-concepts realization on the adiabatic D-Wave computer demonstrates that quantum machines offer a promising way to solve the prevalent yet difficult synchronization problems
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