Packing of permutations into Latin squares

Abstract

For every positive integer n greater than 4 there is a set of Latin squares of order n such that every permutation of the numbers 1,…,n appears exactly once as a row, a column, a reverse row or a reverse column of one of the given Latin squares. If n is greater than 4 and not of the form p or 2p for some prime number p congruent to 3 modulo 4, then there always exists a Latin square of order n in which the rows, columns, reverse rows and reverse columns are all distinct permutations of 1,…,n, and which constitute a permutation group of order 4n. If n is prime congruent to 1 modulo 4, then a set of (n-1)/4 mutually orthogonal Latin squares of order n can also be constructed by a classical method of linear algebra in such a way, that the rows, columns, reverse rows and reverse columns are all distinct and constitute a permutation group of order n(n-1).

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