8 research outputs found
Canonical Representatives of Morphic Permutations
An infinite permutation can be defined as a linear ordering of the set of
natural numbers. In particular, an infinite permutation can be constructed with
an aperiodic infinite word over as the lexicographic order
of the shifts of the word. In this paper, we discuss the question if an
infinite permutation defined this way admits a canonical representative, that
is, can be defined by a sequence of numbers from [0, 1], such that the
frequency of its elements in any interval is equal to the length of that
interval. We show that a canonical representative exists if and only if the
word is uniquely ergodic, and that is why we use the term ergodic permutations.
We also discuss ways to construct the canonical representative of a permutation
defined by a morphic word and generalize the construction of Makarov, 2009, for
the Thue-Morse permutation to a wider class of infinite words.Comment: Springer. WORDS 2015, Sep 2015, Kiel, Germany. Combinatorics on
Words: 10th International Conference. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1503.0618
On 3-chromatic distance-regular graphs
We give some necessary conditions for a graph to be 3-chromatic in terms of the spectrum of the adjacency matrix. For all known distance-regular graphs it is determined whether they are 3-chromatic. A start is made with the classification of 3-chromatic distance-regular graphs, and it is shown that such graphs, if not complete 3-partite, must have ¿ = 1