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Stanley sequence

In mathematics, a Stanley sequence is an integer sequence generated by a greedy algorithm that chooses the sequence members to avoid arithmetic progressions. If is a finite set of non-negative integers on which no three elements form an arithmetic progression (that is, a Salem–Spencer set), then the Stanley sequence generated from starts from the elements of , in sorted order, and then repeatedly chooses each successive element of the sequence to be a number that is larger than the already-chosen numbers and does not form any three-term arithmetic progression with them. These sequences are named after Richard P. Stanley.

Binary–ternary sequence edit

The Stanley sequence starting from the empty set consists of those numbers whose ternary representations have only the digits 0 and 1.[1] That is, when written in ternary, they look like binary numbers. These numbers are

0, 1, 3, 4, 9, 10, 12, 13, 27, 28, 30, 31, 36, 37, 39, 40, ... (sequence A005836 in the OEIS)

By their construction as a Stanley sequence, this sequence is the lexicographically first arithmetic-progression-free sequence. Its elements are the sums of distinct powers of three, the numbers   such that the  th central binomial coefficient is 1 mod 3, and the numbers whose balanced ternary representation is the same as their ternary representation.[2]

The construction of this sequence from the ternary numbers is analogous to the construction of the Moser–de Bruijn sequence, the sequence of numbers whose base-4 representations have only the digits 0 and 1, and the construction of the Cantor set as the subset of real numbers in the interval   whose ternary representations use only the digits 0 and 2. More generally, they are a 2-regular sequence, one of a class of integer sequences defined by a linear recurrence relation with multiplier 2.[3]

This sequence includes three powers of two: 1, 4, and 256 = 35 + 32 + 3 + 1. Paul Erdős conjectured that these are the only powers of two that it contains.[4]

Growth rate edit

Andrew Odlyzko and Richard P. Stanley observed that the number of elements up to some threshold   in the binary–ternary sequence, and in other Stanley sequences starting from   or  , grows proportionally to  . For other starting sets   the Stanley sequences that they considered appeared to grow more erratically but even more sparsely.[1] For instance, the first irregular case is  , which generates the sequence

0, 4, 5, 7, 11, 12, 16, 23, 26, 31, 33, 37, 38, 44, 49, 56, 73, 78, 80, 85, 95, 99, ... (sequence A005487 in the OEIS)

Odlyzko and Stanley conjectured that in such cases the number of elements up to any threshold   is  . That is, there is a dichotomy in the growth rate of Stanley sequences between the ones with similar growth to the binary–ternary sequence and others with a much smaller growth rate; according to this conjecture, there should be no Stanley sequences with intermediate growth.[1][5]

Moy proved that Stanley sequences cannot grow significantly more slowly than the conjectured bound for the sequences of slow growth. Every Stanley sequence has   elements up to  . More precisely Moy showed that, for every such sequence, every  , and all sufficiently large  , the number of elements is at least  .[6] Later authors improved the constant factor in this bound,[7] and proved that for Stanley sequences that grow as   the constant factor in their growth rates can be any rational number whose denominator is a power of three.[8]

History edit

A variation of the binary–ternary sequence (with one added to each element) was considered in 1936 by Paul Erdős and Pál Turán, who observed that it has no three-term arithmetic progression and conjectured (incorrectly) that it was the densest possible sequence with no arithmetic progression.[9]

In unpublished work with Andrew Odlyzko in 1978, Richard P. Stanley experimented with the greedy algorithm to generate progression-free sequences. The sequences they studied were exactly the Stanley sequences for the initial sets  .[1]

Stanley sequences were named, and generalized to other starting sets than  , in a paper published in 1999 by Erdős (posthumously) with four other authors.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Odlyzko, A. M.; Stanley, R. P. (January 1978), OdlSta-78 (PDF)
  2. ^ Sloane, N. J. A. (ed.). "Sequence A005836". The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences. OEIS Foundation.
  3. ^ Allouche, Jean-Paul; Shallit, Jeffrey (1992), "The ring of  -regular sequences", Theoretical Computer Science, 98 (2): 163–197, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.8.6912, doi:10.1016/0304-3975(92)90001-V, MR 1166363. See Example 26, p. 192.
  4. ^ Gupta, Hansraj (1978), "Powers of 2 and sums of distinct powers of 3", Univerzitet u Beogradu Publikacije Elektrotehničkog Fakulteta, Serija Matematika i Fizika (602–633): 151–158 (1979), MR 0580438
  5. ^ a b Erdős, P.; Lev, V.; Rauzy, G.; Sándor, C.; Sárközy, A. (1999), "Greedy algorithm, arithmetic progressions, subset sums and divisibility", Discrete Mathematics, 200 (1–3): 119–135, doi:10.1016/S0012-365X(98)00385-9, MR 1692285
  6. ^ Moy, Richard A. (2011), "On the growth of the counting function of Stanley sequences", Discrete Mathematics, 311 (7): 560–562, arXiv:1101.0022, doi:10.1016/j.disc.2010.12.019, MR 2765623, S2CID 11040813
  7. ^ Dai, Li-Xia; Chen, Yong-Gao (2013), "On the counting function of Stanley sequences", Publicationes Mathematicae Debrecen, 82 (1): 91–95, doi:10.5486/PMD.2013.5286, MR 3034370
  8. ^ Rolnick, David; Venkataramana, Praveen S. (2015), "On the growth of Stanley sequences", Discrete Mathematics, 338 (11): 1928–1937, arXiv:1408.4710, doi:10.1016/j.disc.2015.04.006, MR 3357778, S2CID 2568329
  9. ^ Erdős, Paul; Turán, Paul (1936), "On some sequences of integers" (PDF), Journal of the London Mathematical Society, 11 (4): 261–264, doi:10.1112/jlms/s1-11.4.261, MR 1574918

Further reading edit

  • Moy, Richard A. (2017), Stanley sequences with odd character, arXiv:1707.02037
  • Moy, Richard A.; Rolnick, David (2016), "Novel structures in Stanley sequences", Discrete Mathematics, 339 (2): 689–698, arXiv:1502.06013, doi:10.1016/j.disc.2015.10.017, MR 3431382, S2CID 6660477
  • Rolnick, David (2017), "On the classification of Stanley sequences", European Journal of Combinatorics, 59: 51–70, arXiv:1408.1940, doi:10.1016/j.ejc.2016.06.004, MR 3546902
  • Sawhney, Mehtaab (2017), Character Values of Stanley Sequences, arXiv:1706.05444

stanley, sequence, mathematics, integer, sequence, generated, greedy, algorithm, that, chooses, sequence, members, avoid, arithmetic, progressions, displaystyle, finite, negative, integers, which, three, elements, form, arithmetic, progression, that, salem, sp. In mathematics a Stanley sequence is an integer sequence generated by a greedy algorithm that chooses the sequence members to avoid arithmetic progressions If S displaystyle S is a finite set of non negative integers on which no three elements form an arithmetic progression that is a Salem Spencer set then the Stanley sequence generated from S displaystyle S starts from the elements of S displaystyle S in sorted order and then repeatedly chooses each successive element of the sequence to be a number that is larger than the already chosen numbers and does not form any three term arithmetic progression with them These sequences are named after Richard P Stanley Contents 1 Binary ternary sequence 2 Growth rate 3 History 4 References 5 Further readingBinary ternary sequence editThe Stanley sequence starting from the empty set consists of those numbers whose ternary representations have only the digits 0 and 1 1 That is when written in ternary they look like binary numbers These numbers are 0 1 3 4 9 10 12 13 27 28 30 31 36 37 39 40 sequence A005836 in the OEIS By their construction as a Stanley sequence this sequence is the lexicographically first arithmetic progression free sequence Its elements are the sums of distinct powers of three the numbers n displaystyle n nbsp such that the n displaystyle n nbsp th central binomial coefficient is 1 mod 3 and the numbers whose balanced ternary representation is the same as their ternary representation 2 The construction of this sequence from the ternary numbers is analogous to the construction of the Moser de Bruijn sequence the sequence of numbers whose base 4 representations have only the digits 0 and 1 and the construction of the Cantor set as the subset of real numbers in the interval 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 nbsp whose ternary representations use only the digits 0 and 2 More generally they are a 2 regular sequence one of a class of integer sequences defined by a linear recurrence relation with multiplier 2 3 This sequence includes three powers of two 1 4 and 256 35 32 3 1 Paul Erdos conjectured that these are the only powers of two that it contains 4 Growth rate editAndrew Odlyzko and Richard P Stanley observed that the number of elements up to some threshold n displaystyle n nbsp in the binary ternary sequence and in other Stanley sequences starting from 0 3k displaystyle 0 3 k nbsp or 0 2 3k displaystyle 0 2 cdot 3 k nbsp grows proportionally to nlog2 3 n0 631 displaystyle n log 2 3 approx n 0 631 nbsp For other starting sets 0 s displaystyle 0 s nbsp the Stanley sequences that they considered appeared to grow more erratically but even more sparsely 1 For instance the first irregular case is s 4 displaystyle s 4 nbsp which generates the sequence 0 4 5 7 11 12 16 23 26 31 33 37 38 44 49 56 73 78 80 85 95 99 sequence A005487 in the OEIS Odlyzko and Stanley conjectured that in such cases the number of elements up to any threshold n displaystyle n nbsp is O nlog n displaystyle O bigl sqrt n log n bigr nbsp That is there is a dichotomy in the growth rate of Stanley sequences between the ones with similar growth to the binary ternary sequence and others with a much smaller growth rate according to this conjecture there should be no Stanley sequences with intermediate growth 1 5 Moy proved that Stanley sequences cannot grow significantly more slowly than the conjectured bound for the sequences of slow growth Every Stanley sequence has W n displaystyle Omega bigl sqrt n bigr nbsp elements up to n displaystyle n nbsp More precisely Moy showed that for every such sequence every e gt 0 displaystyle varepsilon gt 0 nbsp and all sufficiently large n displaystyle n nbsp the number of elements is at least 2 e n displaystyle sqrt 2 varepsilon sqrt n nbsp 6 Later authors improved the constant factor in this bound 7 and proved that for Stanley sequences that grow as nlog2 3 displaystyle n log 2 3 nbsp the constant factor in their growth rates can be any rational number whose denominator is a power of three 8 History editA variation of the binary ternary sequence with one added to each element was considered in 1936 by Paul Erdos and Pal Turan who observed that it has no three term arithmetic progression and conjectured incorrectly that it was the densest possible sequence with no arithmetic progression 9 In unpublished work with Andrew Odlyzko in 1978 Richard P Stanley experimented with the greedy algorithm to generate progression free sequences The sequences they studied were exactly the Stanley sequences for the initial sets 0 s displaystyle 0 s nbsp 1 Stanley sequences were named and generalized to other starting sets than 0 s displaystyle 0 s nbsp in a paper published in 1999 by Erdos posthumously with four other authors 5 References edit a b c d Odlyzko A M Stanley R P January 1978 OdlSta 78 PDF Sloane N J A ed Sequence A005836 The On Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences OEIS Foundation Allouche Jean Paul Shallit Jeffrey 1992 The ring of k displaystyle k nbsp regular sequences Theoretical Computer Science 98 2 163 197 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 8 6912 doi 10 1016 0304 3975 92 90001 V MR 1166363 See Example 26 p 192 Gupta Hansraj 1978 Powers of 2 and sums of distinct powers of 3 Univerzitet u Beogradu Publikacije Elektrotehnickog Fakulteta Serija Matematika i Fizika 602 633 151 158 1979 MR 0580438 a b Erdos P Lev V Rauzy G Sandor C Sarkozy A 1999 Greedy algorithm arithmetic progressions subset sums and divisibility Discrete Mathematics 200 1 3 119 135 doi 10 1016 S0012 365X 98 00385 9 MR 1692285 Moy Richard A 2011 On the growth of the counting function of Stanley sequences Discrete Mathematics 311 7 560 562 arXiv 1101 0022 doi 10 1016 j disc 2010 12 019 MR 2765623 S2CID 11040813 Dai Li Xia Chen Yong Gao 2013 On the counting function of Stanley sequences Publicationes Mathematicae Debrecen 82 1 91 95 doi 10 5486 PMD 2013 5286 MR 3034370 Rolnick David Venkataramana Praveen S 2015 On the growth of Stanley sequences Discrete Mathematics 338 11 1928 1937 arXiv 1408 4710 doi 10 1016 j disc 2015 04 006 MR 3357778 S2CID 2568329 Erdos Paul Turan Paul 1936 On some sequences of integers PDF Journal of the London Mathematical Society 11 4 261 264 doi 10 1112 jlms s1 11 4 261 MR 1574918Further reading editMoy Richard A 2017 Stanley sequences with odd character arXiv 1707 02037 Moy Richard A Rolnick David 2016 Novel structures in Stanley sequences Discrete Mathematics 339 2 689 698 arXiv 1502 06013 doi 10 1016 j disc 2015 10 017 MR 3431382 S2CID 6660477 Rolnick David 2017 On the classification of Stanley sequences European Journal of Combinatorics 59 51 70 arXiv 1408 1940 doi 10 1016 j ejc 2016 06 004 MR 3546902 Sawhney Mehtaab 2017 Character Values of Stanley Sequences arXiv 1706 05444 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanley sequence amp oldid 1170914246, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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