Maximum Number of Distinct and Nonequivalent Nonstandard Squares in a Word
Abstract
The combinatorics of squares in a word depends on how the equivalence of halves of the square is defined. We consider Abelian squares, parameterized squares, and order-preserving squares. The word uv is an Abelian (parameterized, order-preserving) square if u and v are equivalent in the Abelian (parameterized, order-preserving) sense. The maximum number of ordinary squares in a word is known to be asymptotically linear, but the exact bound is still investigated. We present several results on the maximum number of distinct squares for nonstandard subword equivalence relations. Let SQAbel(n,σ) and SQ'Abel(n,σ) denote the maximum number of Abelian squares in a word of length n over an alphabet of size σ, which are distinct as words and which are nonequivalent in the Abelian sense, respectively. For σ 2 we prove that SQAbel(n,σ)=(n2), SQ'Abel(n,σ)=(n3/2) and SQ'Abel(n,σ) = O(n11/6). We also give linear bounds for parameterized and order-preserving squares for alphabets of constant size: SQparam(n,O(1))=(n), SQop(n,O(1))=(n). The upper bounds have quadratic dependence on the alphabet size for order-preserving squares and exponential dependence for parameterized squares. As a side result we construct infinite words over the smallest alphabet which avoid nontrivial order-preserving squares and nontrivial parameterized cubes (nontrivial parameterized squares cannot be avoided in an infinite word).
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.