6,021 research outputs found
Amicable pairs and aliquot cycles for elliptic curves
An amicable pair for an elliptic curve E/Q is a pair of primes (p,q) of good
reduction for E satisfying #E(F_p) = q and #E(F_q) = p. In this paper we study
elliptic amicable pairs and analogously defined longer elliptic aliquot cycles.
We show that there exist elliptic curves with arbitrarily long aliqout cycles,
but that CM elliptic curves (with j not 0) have no aliqout cycles of length
greater than two. We give conjectural formulas for the frequency of amicable
pairs. For CM curves, the derivation of precise conjectural formulas involves a
detailed analysis of the values of the Grossencharacter evaluated at a prime
ideal P in End(E) having the property that #E(F_P) is prime. This is especially
intricate for the family of curves with j = 0.Comment: 53 page
Free nilpotent and -type Lie algebras. Combinatorial and orthogonal designs
The aim of our paper is to construct pseudo -type algebras from the
covering free nilpotent two-step Lie algebra as the quotient algebra by an
ideal. We propose an explicit algorithm of construction of such an ideal by
making use of a non-degenerate scalar product. Moreover, as a bypass result, we
recover the existence of a rational structure on pseudo -type algebras,
which implies the existence of lattices on the corresponding pseudo -type
Lie groups. Our approach substantially uses combinatorics and reveals the
interplay of pseudo -type algebras with combinatorial and orthogonal
designs. One of the key tools is the family of Hurwitz-Radon orthogonal
matrices
Constructions for orthogonal designs using signed group orthogonal designs
Craigen introduced and studied signed group Hadamard matrices extensively and
eventually provided an asymptotic existence result for Hadamard matrices.
Following his lead, Ghaderpour introduced signed group orthogonal designs and
showed an asymptotic existence result for orthogonal designs and consequently
Hadamard matrices. In this paper, we construct some interesting families of
orthogonal designs using signed group orthogonal designs to show the capability
of signed group orthogonal designs in generation of different types of
orthogonal designs.Comment: To appear in Discrete Mathematics (Elsevier). No figure
Amicable pairs : a survey
In 1750, Euler [20, 21] published an extensive paper on amicable pairs, by which he added fifty-nine new amicable pairs to the three amicable pairs known thus far. In 1972, Lee and Madachy [45] published a historical survey of amicable pairs, with a list of the 1108 amicable pairs then known. In 1995, Pedersen [48] started to create and maintain an Internet site with lists of all the known amicable pairs. The current (February 2003) number of amicable pairs in these lists exceeds four million. The purpose of this paper is to update the 1972 paper of Lee and Madachy, in order to document the developments which have led to the explosion of known amicable pairs in the past thirty years. We hope that this may stimulate research in the direction of finding a proof that the number of amicable pairs is infinite
Non-existence of 6-dimensional pseudomanifolds with complementarity
In a previous paper the second author showed that if is a pseudomanifold
with complementarity other than the 6-vertex real projective plane and the
9-vertex complex projective plane, then must have dimension , and -
in case of equality - must have exactly 12 vertices. In this paper we prove
that such a 6-dimensional pseudomanifold does not exist. On the way to proving
our main result we also prove that all combinatorial triangulations of the
4-sphere with at most 10 vertices are combinatorial 4-spheres.Comment: 11 pages. To appear in Advances in Geometr
Missing Contracts: On the Rationality of not Signing a Prenuptial Agreement
Many couples do not sign prenuptial agreements, even though this often leads to costly and inefficient litigation in case of divorce. In this paper we show that strategic reasons may prevent agents from signing a prenuptial agreement. Partners which have high productivity in marital activities wish to signal their type by running the risk of a costly divorce. Hence this contract incompleteness arises as a screening device. Moreover, the threat of costly divorce is credible since the lack of an ex-ante agreement leads to a moral hazard problem within the couple, which induces partners to reject any ex-post amicable agreement, under specific circumstances. We also investigate conditions that make this contract incompleteness an optimal form of contracting and we briefly discuss the effects of enforceable and/or mandatory premarital agreements on the rate of divorce and on the social welfare. Finally, our model suggests that there is no major objection in making prenuptial agreements enforceable, but also that there are not good reasons to make them mandatory.asymmetric information, incomplete contracts, prenuptial agreement.
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