On the maximal number of cubic subwords in a string
Abstract
We investigate the problem of the maximum number of cubic subwords (of the form www) in a given word. We also consider square subwords (of the form ww). The problem of the maximum number of squares in a word is not well understood. Several new results related to this problem are produced in the paper. We consider two simple problems related to the maximum number of subwords which are squares or which are highly repetitive; then we provide a nontrivial estimation for the number of cubes. We show that the maximum number of squares xx such that x is not a primitive word (nonprimitive squares) in a word of length n is exactly n2 - 1, and the maximum number of subwords of the form xk, for k 3, is exactly n-2. In particular, the maximum number of cubes in a word is not greater than n-2 either. Using very technical properties of occurrences of cubes, we improve this bound significantly. We show that the maximum number of cubes in a word of length n is between (1/2)n and (4/5)n. (In particular, we improve the lower bound from the conference version of the paper.)
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.