A Reversibility Characterization of Locally Finite Groups by Cellular Automata

Abstract

For cellular automata over finite alphabets, bijectivity already implies reversibility. Over infinite alphabets this implication may fail, and the remaining obstruction in the periodic case was recorded by Ceccherini-Silberstein and Coornaert as Open Problem 2 in Cellular Automata and Groups. We prove an exact group-theoretic characterization. A group G is locally finite if and only if, over every alphabet, every bijective cellular automaton AG AG is reversible. Equivalently, if G is not locally finite, then for every infinite alphabet A there exists a bijective cellular automaton AG AG whose inverse is not a cellular automaton. The counterexample is already obtained on a countable alphabet. Its local rule has a rank track, a direction track and a binary data track; the forward map is triangular along finite directed chains of arbitrary length, so its inverse is defined pointwise but has no uniform finite memory. As a consequence, Open Problem 2 has an affirmative answer, and the periodicity hypothesis is unnecessary for the negative direction.

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