Nested recursions with ceiling function solutions
Abstract
Consider a nested, non-homogeneous recursion R(n) defined by R(n) = Σi=1k R(n-si-Σj=1pi R(n-aij)) + nu, with c initial conditions R(1) = xi1 > 0,R(2)=xi2 > 0, ..., R(c)=xic > 0, where the parameters are integers satisfying k > 0, pi > 0 and aij > 0. We develop an algorithm to answer the following question: for an arbitrary rational number r/q, is there any set of values for k, pi, si, aij and nu such that the ceiling function ceilingrn/q is the unique solution generated by R(n) with appropriate initial conditions? We apply this algorithm to explore those ceiling functions that appear as solutions to R(n). The pattern that emerges from this empirical investigation leads us to the following general result: every ceiling function of the form ceilingn/q$ is the solution of infinitely many such recursions. Further, the empirical evidence suggests that the converse conjecture is true: if ceilingrn/q is the solution generated by any recursion R(n) of the form above, then r=1. We also use our ceiling function methodology to derive the first known connection between the recursion R(n) and a natural generalization of Conway's recursion.
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