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Gilbreath shuffle

A Gilbreath shuffle is a way to shuffle a deck of cards, named after mathematician Norman Gilbreath (also known for Gilbreath's conjecture). Gilbreath's principle describes the properties of a deck that are preserved by this type of shuffle, and a Gilbreath permutation is a permutation that can be formed by a Gilbreath shuffle.[1]

Description

A Gilbreath shuffle consists of the following two steps:[1]

  • Deal off any number of the cards from the top of the deck onto a new pile of cards.
  • Riffle the new pile with the remainder of the deck.

It differs from the more commonly used procedure of cutting a deck into two piles and then riffling the piles, in that the first step of dealing off cards reverses the order of the cards in the new pile, whereas cutting the deck would preserve this order.

Gilbreath's principle

Although seemingly highly random, Gilbreath shuffles preserve many properties of the initial deck. For instance, if the initial deck of cards alternates between black and red cards, then after a single Gilbreath shuffle the deck will still have the property that, if it is grouped into consecutive pairs of cards, each pair will have one black card and one red card. Similarly, if a Gilbreath shuffle is used on a deck of cards where every card has the same suit as the card four positions prior, and the resulting deck is grouped into consecutive sets of four cards, then each set will contain one card of each suit. This phenomenon is known as Gilbreath's principle and is the basis for several card tricks.[1]

Gilbreath permutations

Mathematically, Gilbreath shuffles can be described by Gilbreath permutations, permutations of the numbers from 1 to n that can be obtained by a Gilbreath shuffle with a deck of cards labeled with these numbers in order. Gilbreath permutations can be characterized by the property that every prefix contains a consecutive set of numbers.[1] For instance, the permutation (5,6,4,7,8,3,2,9,1,10) is a Gilbreath permutation for n = 10 that can be obtained by dealing off the first four or five cards and riffling them with the rest. Each of its prefixes (5), (5,6), (5,6,4), (5,6,4,7), etc. contain a set of numbers that (when sorted) form a consecutive subsequence of the numbers from 1 to 10. Equivalently, in terms of permutation patterns, the Gilbreath permutations are the permutations that avoid the two patterns 132 and 312.[2]

A Gilbreath shuffle may be uniquely determined by specifying which of the positions in the resulting shuffled deck are occupied by cards that were dealt off into the second pile, and which positions are occupied by cards that were not dealt off. Therefore, there are   possible ways of performing a Gilbreath shuffle on a deck of   cards. However, each Gilbreath permutation may be obtained from two different Gilbreath shuffles, as the first position of the permutation may have come from either of the two piles. Therefore, there are   distinct Gilbreath permutations.[1][3]

The cyclic Gilbreath permutations of order   are in one-to-one correspondence with the real numbers   for which the iteration   (starting from  ) underlying the Mandelbrot set is periodic with period  . In this correspondence, the permutation that corresponds to a given value   describes the numerical sorted order of the iterates for  .[1] The number of cyclic Gilbreath permutations (and therefore also the number of real periodic points of the Mandelbrot set), for  , is given by the integer sequence

1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 9, 16, 28, 51, 93, 170, 315, 585, 1091, ... (sequence A000048 in the OEIS).

Ultimate Gilbreath principle

 
Here is an example illustrating the theorem. For a ten-card deck, we can deal off four cards into a small pile on the table (one by one) and then riffle shuffle them to lead to the arrangement π above

A theorem called "the ultimate Gilbreath principle" states that, for a permutation   of  , the following four properties are equivalent:[1]

  •   is a Gilbreath permutation.
  • For each  , the top   cards   are distinct modulo  .
  • For each   and   with  , the   cards   are distinct modulo  .
  • For each  , the top   cards are consecutive in  .

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Diaconis, Persi; Graham, Ron (2012), "Chapter 5: From the Gilbreath Principle to the Mandelbrot Set" (PDF), Magical Mathematics: the mathematical ideas that animate great magic tricks, Princeton University Press, pp. 61–83.
  2. ^ Vella, Antoine (2002), "Pattern avoidance in permutations: linear and cyclic orders", Electronic Journal of Combinatorics, 9 (2): R18, doi:10.37236/1690, MR 2028287. See in particular Proposition 3.3.
  3. ^ Vella (2002) credits this result on the number of Gilbreath permutations to Simion, Rodica; Schmidt, Frank W. (1985), "Restricted permutations", European Journal of Combinatorics, 6 (4): 383–406, doi:10.1016/s0195-6698(85)80052-4, MR 0829358.

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A Gilbreath shuffle is a way to shuffle a deck of cards named after mathematician Norman Gilbreath also known for Gilbreath s conjecture Gilbreath s principle describes the properties of a deck that are preserved by this type of shuffle and a Gilbreath permutation is a permutation that can be formed by a Gilbreath shuffle 1 Contents 1 Description 2 Gilbreath s principle 3 Gilbreath permutations 4 Ultimate Gilbreath principle 5 ReferencesDescription EditA Gilbreath shuffle consists of the following two steps 1 Deal off any number of the cards from the top of the deck onto a new pile of cards Riffle the new pile with the remainder of the deck It differs from the more commonly used procedure of cutting a deck into two piles and then riffling the piles in that the first step of dealing off cards reverses the order of the cards in the new pile whereas cutting the deck would preserve this order Gilbreath s principle EditAlthough seemingly highly random Gilbreath shuffles preserve many properties of the initial deck For instance if the initial deck of cards alternates between black and red cards then after a single Gilbreath shuffle the deck will still have the property that if it is grouped into consecutive pairs of cards each pair will have one black card and one red card Similarly if a Gilbreath shuffle is used on a deck of cards where every card has the same suit as the card four positions prior and the resulting deck is grouped into consecutive sets of four cards then each set will contain one card of each suit This phenomenon is known as Gilbreath s principle and is the basis for several card tricks 1 Gilbreath permutations EditMathematically Gilbreath shuffles can be described by Gilbreath permutations permutations of the numbers from 1 to n that can be obtained by a Gilbreath shuffle with a deck of cards labeled with these numbers in order Gilbreath permutations can be characterized by the property that every prefix contains a consecutive set of numbers 1 For instance the permutation 5 6 4 7 8 3 2 9 1 10 is a Gilbreath permutation for n 10 that can be obtained by dealing off the first four or five cards and riffling them with the rest Each of its prefixes 5 5 6 5 6 4 5 6 4 7 etc contain a set of numbers that when sorted form a consecutive subsequence of the numbers from 1 to 10 Equivalently in terms of permutation patterns the Gilbreath permutations are the permutations that avoid the two patterns 132 and 312 2 A Gilbreath shuffle may be uniquely determined by specifying which of the positions in the resulting shuffled deck are occupied by cards that were dealt off into the second pile and which positions are occupied by cards that were not dealt off Therefore there are 2 n displaystyle 2 n possible ways of performing a Gilbreath shuffle on a deck of n displaystyle n cards However each Gilbreath permutation may be obtained from two different Gilbreath shuffles as the first position of the permutation may have come from either of the two piles Therefore there are 2 n 1 displaystyle 2 n 1 distinct Gilbreath permutations 1 3 The cyclic Gilbreath permutations of order n displaystyle n are in one to one correspondence with the real numbers c displaystyle c for which the iteration x x 2 c displaystyle x mapsto x 2 c starting from x 0 displaystyle x 0 underlying the Mandelbrot set is periodic with period n displaystyle n In this correspondence the permutation that corresponds to a given value c displaystyle c describes the numerical sorted order of the iterates for c displaystyle c 1 The number of cyclic Gilbreath permutations and therefore also the number of real periodic points of the Mandelbrot set for n 1 2 3 displaystyle n 1 2 3 dots is given by the integer sequence 1 1 1 2 3 5 9 16 28 51 93 170 315 585 1091 sequence A000048 in the OEIS Ultimate Gilbreath principle Edit1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 5 6 7 8 9 10 4 3 2 1 4 5 6 3 7 2 8 9 1 10 displaystyle begin matrix 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 end matrix to begin matrix 5 6 7 8 9 10 end matrix begin matrix 4 3 2 1 end matrix to begin matrix 4 5 6 3 7 2 8 9 1 10 end matrix Here is an example illustrating the theorem For a ten card deck we can deal off four cards into a small pile on the table one by one and then riffle shuffle them to lead to the arrangement p above A theorem called the ultimate Gilbreath principle states that for a permutation p displaystyle pi of 1 2 3 n displaystyle 1 2 3 dots n the following four properties are equivalent 1 p displaystyle pi is a Gilbreath permutation For each j displaystyle j the top j displaystyle j cards p 1 p j displaystyle pi 1 dots pi j are distinct modulo j displaystyle j For each j displaystyle j and k displaystyle k with k j n displaystyle kj leq n the j displaystyle j cards p k 1 j 1 p k 1 j 2 p k j displaystyle pi bigl k 1 j 1 bigr pi bigl k 1 j 2 bigr dots pi kj are distinct modulo j displaystyle j For each j displaystyle j the top j displaystyle j cards are consecutive in 1 2 n displaystyle 1 2 dots n References Edit a b c d e f g Diaconis Persi Graham Ron 2012 Chapter 5 From the Gilbreath Principle to the Mandelbrot Set PDF Magical Mathematics the mathematical ideas that animate great magic tricks Princeton University Press pp 61 83 Vella Antoine 2002 Pattern avoidance in permutations linear and cyclic orders Electronic Journal of Combinatorics 9 2 R18 doi 10 37236 1690 MR 2028287 See in particular Proposition 3 3 Vella 2002 credits this result on the number of Gilbreath permutations to Simion Rodica Schmidt Frank W 1985 Restricted permutations European Journal of Combinatorics 6 4 383 406 doi 10 1016 s0195 6698 85 80052 4 MR 0829358 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gilbreath shuffle amp oldid 1098686009 Gilbreath permutations, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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