An atom of a regular language L with n (left) quotients is a non-empty
intersection of uncomplemented or complemented quotients of L, where each of
the n quotients appears in a term of the intersection. The quotient complexity
of L, which is the same as the state complexity of L, is the number of
quotients of L. We prove that, for any language L with quotient complexity n,
the quotient complexity of any atom of L with r complemented quotients has an
upper bound of 2^n-1 if r=0 or r=n, and 1+\sum_{k=1}^{r} \sum_{h=k+1}^{k+n-r}
C_{h}^{n} \cdot C_{k}^{h} otherwise, where C_j^i is the binomial coefficient.
For each n\ge 1, we exhibit a language whose atoms meet these bounds.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, 9 table