16,234 research outputs found

    Four-class Skew-symmetric Association Schemes

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    An association scheme is called skew-symmetric if it has no symmetric adjacency relations other than the diagonal one. In this paper, we study 4-class skew-symmetric association schemes. In J. Ma [On the nonexistence of skew-symmetric amorphous association schemes, submitted for publication], we discovered that their character tables fall into three types. We now determine their intersection matrices. We then determine the character tables and intersection numbers for 4-class skew-symmetric pseudocyclic association schemes, the only known examples of which are cyclotomic schemes. As a result, we answer a question raised by S. Y. Song [Commutative association schemes whose symmetrizations have two classes, J. Algebraic Combin. 5(1) 47-55, 1996]. We characterize and classify 4-class imprimitive skew-symmetric association schemes. We also prove that no 2-class Johnson scheme can admit a 4-class skew-symmetric fission scheme. Based on three types of character tables above, a short list of feasible parameters is generated.Comment: 12 page

    Elastic Multi-resource Network Slicing: Can Protection Lead to Improved Performance?

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    In order to meet the performance/privacy requirements of future data-intensive mobile applications, e.g., self-driving cars, mobile data analytics, and AR/VR, service providers are expected to draw on shared storage/computation/connectivity resources at the network "edge". To be cost-effective, a key functional requirement for such infrastructure is enabling the sharing of heterogeneous resources amongst tenants/service providers supporting spatially varying and dynamic user demands. This paper proposes a resource allocation criterion, namely, Share Constrained Slicing (SCS), for slices allocated predefined shares of the network's resources, which extends the traditional alpha-fairness criterion, by striking a balance among inter- and intra-slice fairness vs. overall efficiency. We show that SCS has several desirable properties including slice-level protection, envyfreeness, and load driven elasticity. In practice, mobile users' dynamics could make the cost of implementing SCS high, so we discuss the feasibility of using a simpler (dynamically) weighted max-min as a surrogate resource allocation scheme. For a setting with stochastic loads and elastic user requirements, we establish a sufficient condition for the stability of the associated coupled network system. Finally, and perhaps surprisingly, we show via extensive simulations that while SCS (and/or the surrogate weighted max-min allocation) provides inter-slice protection, they can achieve improved job delay and/or perceived throughput, as compared to other weighted max-min based allocation schemes whose intra-slice weight allocation is not share-constrained, e.g., traditional max-min or discriminatory processor sharing

    Distance-regular graphs

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    This is a survey of distance-regular graphs. We present an introduction to distance-regular graphs for the reader who is unfamiliar with the subject, and then give an overview of some developments in the area of distance-regular graphs since the monograph 'BCN' [Brouwer, A.E., Cohen, A.M., Neumaier, A., Distance-Regular Graphs, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1989] was written.Comment: 156 page

    Cometric Association Schemes

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    The combinatorial objects known as association schemes arise in group theory, extremal graph theory, coding theory, the design of experiments, and even quantum information theory. One may think of a d-class association scheme as a (d + 1)-dimensional matrix algebra over R closed under entrywise products. In this context, an imprimitive scheme is one which admits a subalgebra of block matrices, also closed under the entrywise product. Such systems of imprimitivity provide us with quotient schemes, smaller association schemes which are often easier to understand, providing useful information about the structure of the larger scheme. One important property of any association scheme is that we may find a basis of d + 1 idempotent matrices for our algebra. A cometric scheme is one whose idempotent basis may be ordered E0, E1, . . . , Ed so that there exists polynomials f0, f1, . . . , fd with fi ◦ (E1) = Ei and deg(fi) = i for each i. Imprimitive cometric schemes relate closely to t-distance sets, sets of unit vectors with only t distinct angles, such as equiangular lines and mutually unbiased bases. Throughout this thesis we are primarily interested in three distinct goals: building new examples of cometric association schemes, drawing connections between cometric association schemes and other objects either combinatorial or geometric, and finding new realizability conditions on feasible parameter sets — using these conditions to rule out open parameter sets when possible. After introducing association schemes with relevant terminology and definitions, this thesis focuses on a few recent results regarding cometric schemes with small d. We begin by examining the matrix algebra of any such scheme, first looking for low rank positive semidefinite matrices with few distinct entries and later establishing new conditions on realizable parameter sets. We then focus on certain imprimitive examples of both 3- and 4-class cometric association schemes, generating new examples of the former while building realizability conditions for both. In each case, we examine the related t-distance sets, giving conditions which work towards equivalence; in the case of 3-class Q-antipodal schemes, an equivalence is established. We conclude by partially extending a result of Brouwer and Koolen concerning the connectivity of graphs arising from metric association schemes
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