20,572 research outputs found

    Generating functions for Wilf equivalence under generalized factor order

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    Kitaev, Liese, Remmel, and Sagan recently defined generalized factor order on words comprised of letters from a partially ordered set (P,P)(P, \leq_P) by setting uPwu \leq_P w if there is a subword vv of ww of the same length as uu such that the ii-th character of vv is greater than or equal to the ii-th character of uu for all ii. This subword vv is called an embedding of uu into ww. For the case where PP is the positive integers with the usual ordering, they defined the weight of a word w=w1wnw = w_1\ldots w_n to be wt(w)=xi=1nwitn\text{wt}(w) = x^{\sum_{i=1}^n w_i} t^{n}, and the corresponding weight generating function F(u;t,x)=wPuwt(w)F(u;t,x) = \sum_{w \geq_P u} \text{wt}(w). They then defined two words uu and vv to be Wilf equivalent, denoted uvu \backsim v, if and only if F(u;t,x)=F(v;t,x)F(u;t,x) = F(v;t,x). They also defined the related generating function S(u;t,x)=wS(u)wt(w)S(u;t,x) = \sum_{w \in \mathcal{S}(u)} \text{wt}(w) where S(u)\mathcal{S}(u) is the set of all words ww such that the only embedding of uu into ww is a suffix of ww, and showed that uvu \backsim v if and only if S(u;t,x)=S(v;t,x)S(u;t,x) = S(v;t,x). We continue this study by giving an explicit formula for S(u;t,x)S(u;t,x) if uu factors into a weakly increasing word followed by a weakly decreasing word. We use this formula as an aid to classify Wilf equivalence for all words of length 3. We also show that coefficients of related generating functions are well-known sequences in several special cases. Finally, we discuss a conjecture that if uvu \backsim v then uu and vv must be rearrangements, and the stronger conjecture that there also must be a weight-preserving bijection f:S(u)S(v)f: \mathcal{S}(u) \rightarrow \mathcal{S}(v) such that f(u)f(u) is a rearrangement of uu for all uu.Comment: 23 page

    Boosted Schwarzschild Metrics from a Kerr-Schild Perspective

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    The Kerr-Schild version of the Schwarzschild metric contains a Minkowski background which provides a definition of a boosted black hole. There are two Kerr-Schild versions corresponding to ingoing or outgoing principle null directions. We show that the two corresponding Minkowski backgrounds and their associated boosts have an unexpected difference. We analyze this difference and discuss the implications in the nonlinear regime for the gravitational memory effect resulting from the ejection of massive particles from an isolated system. We show that the nonlinear effect agrees with the linearized result based upon the retarded Green function only if the velocity of the ejected particle corresponds to a boost symmetry of the ingoing Minkowski background. A boost with respect to the outgoing Minkowski background is inconsistent with the absence of ingoing radiation from past null infinity.Comment: 13 pages, matches published versio

    Kerr Black Holes and Nonlinear Radiation Memory

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    The Minkowski background intrinsic to the Kerr-Schild version of the Kerr metric provides a definition of a boosted spinning black hole. There are two Kerr-Schild versions corresponding to ingoing or outgoing principal null directions. The two corresponding Minkowski backgrounds and their associated boosts differ drastically. This has an important implication for the gravitational memory effect. A prior analysis of the transition of a non-spinning Schwarzschild black hole to a boosted state showed that the memory effect in the nonlinear regime agrees with the linearised result based upon the retarded Green function only if the final velocity corresponds to a boost symmetry of the ingoing Minkowski background. A boost with respect to the outgoing Minkowski background is inconsistent with the absence of ingoing radiation from past null infinity. We show that this results extends to the transition of a Kerr black hole to a boosted state and apply it to set upper and lower bounds for the boost memory effect resulting from the collision of two spinning black holes.Comment: 17 pages, revised discussion sectio

    Scalable Peer-to-Peer Indexing with Constant State

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    We present a distributed indexing scheme for peer to peer networks. Past work on distributed indexing traded off fast search times with non-constant degree topologies or network-unfriendly behavior such as flooding. In contrast, the scheme we present optimizes all three of these performance measures. That is, we provide logarithmic round searches while maintaining connections to a fixed number of peers and avoiding network flooding. In comparison to the well known scheme Chord, we provide competitive constant factors. Finally, we observe that arbitrary linear speedups are possible and discuss both a general brute force approach and specific economical optimizations

    Stochastic domination: the contact process, Ising models and FKG measures

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    We prove for the contact process on ZdZ^d, and many other graphs, that the upper invariant measure dominates a homogeneous product measure with large density if the infection rate λ\lambda is sufficiently large. As a consequence, this measure percolates if the corresponding product measure percolates. We raise the question of whether domination holds in the symmetric case for all infinite graphs of bounded degree. We study some asymmetric examples which we feel shed some light on this question. We next obtain necessary and sufficient conditions for domination of a product measure for ``downward'' FKG measures. As a consequence of this general result, we show that the plus and minus states for the Ising model on ZdZ^d dominate the same set of product measures. We show that this latter fact fails completely on the homogenous 3-ary tree. We also provide a different distinction between ZdZ^d and the homogenous 3-ary tree concerning stochastic domination and Ising models; while it is known that the plus states for different temperatures on ZdZ^d are never stochastically ordered, on the homogenous 3-ary tree, almost the complete opposite is the case. Next, we show that on ZdZ^d, the set of product measures which the plus state for the Ising model dominates is strictly increasing in the temperature. Finally, we obtain a necessary and sufficient condition for a finite number of variables, which are both FKG and exchangeable, to dominate a given product measure.Comment: 27 page
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