A Generalization of Fibonacci Far-Difference Representations and Gaussian Behavior
Abstract
A natural generalization of base B expansions is Zeckendorf's Theorem: every integer can be uniquely written as a sum of non-consecutive Fibonacci numbers \Fn\, with Fn+1 = Fn + Fn-1 and F1=1, F2=2. If instead we allow the coefficients of the Fibonacci numbers in the decomposition to be zero or 1, the resulting expression is known as the far-difference representation. Alpert proved that a far-difference representation exists and is unique under certain restraints that generalize non-consecutiveness, specifically that two adjacent summands of the same sign must be at least 4 indices apart and those of opposite signs must be at least 3 indices apart. We prove that a far-difference representation can be created using sets of Skipponacci numbers, which are generated by recurrence relations of the form S(k)n+1 = S(k)n + S(k)n-k for k 0. Every integer can be written uniquely as a sum of the S(k)n 's such that every two terms of the same sign differ in index by at least 2k+2, and every two terms of opposite signs differ in index by at least k+2. Additionally, we prove that the number of positive and negative terms in given Skipponacci decompositions converges to a Gaussian, with a computable correlation coefficient that is a rational function of the smallest root of the characteristic polynomial of the recurrence. The proof uses recursion to obtain the generating function for having a fixed number of summands, which we prove converges to the generating function of a Gaussian. We next explore the distribution of gaps between summands, and show that for any k the probability of finding a gap of length j 2k+2 decays geometrically, with decay ratio equal to the largest root of the given k-Skipponacci recurrence. We conclude by finding sequences that have an (s,d) far-difference representation for any positive integers s,d.
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