Nachbin's theorem: Difference between revisions

From formulasearchengine
Jump to navigation Jump to search
en>Yinweichen
en>Yobot
m WP:CHECKWIKI error fixes using AWB (10093)
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
In [[combinatorics]], a '''square-free word''' is a [[String (computer science)|word]] that does not contain any [[Substring#Substring|subword]] twice in a row.
Oscar is what my wife loves to call me and I totally dig that title. South Dakota is exactly where me and my spouse live and my family loves it. To collect cash is what his family members and him appreciate. Hiring is his occupation.<br><br>my web-site - std testing at home - [http://spermdonorinfo.co.uk/groups/eliminate-a-yeast-infection-with-one-of-these-tips/ Recommended Looking at],
 
A square-free word is thus one that [[Avoidable pattern|avoids the pattern]] ''XX''.<ref name=LotII112>Lothaire (2011) p.112</ref><ref name=LotII114>Lothaire (2011) p.114</ref>
 
==Examples==
Over a two-letter alphabet {''a, b''} the only square-free words are the empty word and ''a'', ''b'', ''ab'', ''ba'', ''aba'', and ''bab''.  However, there exist infinite square-free words in any [[alphabet]] with three or more symbols,<ref name=LotII113/>  as proved by [[Axel Thue]].<ref>A. Thue, Über unendliche Zeichenreihen, Norske Vid. Skrifter I Mat.-Nat. Kl., Christiania 7 (1906) 1–22.</ref><ref>A. Thue, Über die gegenseitige Lage gleicher Teile gewisser Zeichenreihen, Norske Vid. Skrifter I Mat.-Nat. Kl., Christiania 1 (1912) 1–67.</ref>
 
One example of an infinite square-free word over an alphabet of size 3 is the word over the alphabet {0,±1} obtained by taking the [[first difference]] of the [[Thue–Morse sequence]].<ref name=PF104>Pytheas Fogg (2002) p.104</ref><ref name=BLRS97>Berstel et al (2009) p.97</ref>
 
An example found by [[John Leech (mathematician)|John Leech]]<ref>{{cite journal | first=J. | last=Leech | authorlink=John Leech (mathematician) | title=A problem on strings of beads | journal=Math. Gazette | volume=41 | year=1957 | pages=277–278 | zbl=0079.01101 }}</ref> is defined recursively over the alphabet {''a, b, c''}.  Let <math>w_1</math> be any word starting with the letter ''a''. Define the words <math> \{w_i \mid i \in \mathbb{N} \}</math> recursively as follows: the word <math>w_{i+1}</math> is obtained from <math>w_i</math> by replacing each ''a'' in <math>w_i</math> with ''abcbacbcabcba'', each ''b'' with ''bcacbacabcacb'', and each ''c'' with ''cabacbabcabac''. It is possible to check that the sequence converges to the infinite square-free word
:''abcbacbcabcbabcacbacabcacbcabacbabcabacbcacbacabcacb''...
 
==Related concepts==
The Thue–Morse sequence is an example of a cube-free word over a binary alphabet.<ref name=LotII113>Lothaire (2011) p.113</ref> This sequence is not square-free but is "almost" so: the [[Critical exponent of a word|critical exponent]] is 2.<ref>{{cite book | title=Developments in Language Theory: Proceedings 10th International Conference, DLT 2006, Santa Barbara, CA, USA, June 26-29, 2006 | volume=4036 | series=Lecture Notes in Computer Science | editor1-first=Oscar H. | editor1-last=Ibarra | editor2-first=Zhe | editor2-last=Dang | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | year=2006 | isbn=3-540-35428-X | first=Dalia | last=Krieger | chapter=On critical exponents in fixed points of non-erasing morphisms | pages=280-291 | zbl=1227.68074 }}</ref>  The Thue–Morse sequence has no '''overlap''' or ''overlapping square'', instances of 0''X''0''X''0 or 1''X''1''X''1:<ref name=LotII113/> it is essentially the only infinite binary word with this property.<ref name=BLRS81>Berstel et al (2009) p.81</ref>
 
The [[Thue number]] of a [[Graph (mathematics)|graph]] ''G'' is the smallest number ''k'' such that ''G'' has a ''k''-coloring for which the sequence of colors along every non-repeating path is squarefree.
 
== Notes ==
{{reflist}}
 
== References ==
* {{cite book | last1=Berstel | first1=Jean | last2=Lauve | first2=Aaron | last3=Reutenauer | first3=Christophe | last4=Saliola | first4=Franco V. | title=Combinatorics on words. Christoffel words and repetitions in words | series=CRM Monograph Series | volume=27 | location=Providence, RI | publisher=[[American Mathematical Society]] | year=2009 | isbn=978-0-8218-4480-9 | url=http://www.ams.org/bookpages/crmm-27 | zbl=1161.68043 }}
* {{cite book | last=Lothaire | first=M. | authorlink=M. Lothaire | title=Combinatorics on words | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | location=Cambridge | year= 1997 | isbn= 0-521-59924-5 }}.
* {{cite book | last=Lothaire | first=M. | authorlink=M. Lothaire | title=Algebraic combinatorics on words | others=With preface by Jean Berstel and Dominique Perrin | edition=Reprint of the 2002 hardback | series=Encyclopedia of Mathematics and Its Applications | volume=90| publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | year=2011 | isbn=978-0-521-18071-9 | zbl=1221.68183 }}
* {{cite book | last=Pytheas Fogg | first=N. | others=Editors Berthé, Valérie; Ferenczi, Sébastien; Mauduit, Christian; Siegel, A. | title=Substitutions in dynamics, arithmetics and combinatorics | series=Lecture Notes in Mathematics | volume=1794 | location=Berlin | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | year=2002 | isbn=3-540-44141-7 | zbl=1014.11015 }}
 
[[Category:Formal languages]]
[[Category:Combinatorics on words]]

Latest revision as of 14:51, 5 May 2014

Oscar is what my wife loves to call me and I totally dig that title. South Dakota is exactly where me and my spouse live and my family loves it. To collect cash is what his family members and him appreciate. Hiring is his occupation.

my web-site - std testing at home - Recommended Looking at,