Maximal arcs in Desarguesian planes of odd order do not exist (Q1375053): Difference between revisions
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Property / cites work: Sets of type \((m,n)\) in the affine and projective planes of order nine / rank | |||
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Property / cites work: Construction of maximal arcs and partial geometries / rank | |||
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Property / cites work: Some results concerning \(\{(q+1)(n-1);\;n\}\)-arcs and \(\{(q+1)\;(n-1)+1;\;n\}\)-arcs in finite projective planes of order \(q\) / rank | |||
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Property / cites work: Construction of maximal arcs and dual ovals in translation planes / rank | |||
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Revision as of 09:03, 28 May 2024
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English | Maximal arcs in Desarguesian planes of odd order do not exist |
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Maximal arcs in Desarguesian planes of odd order do not exist (English)
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5 January 1998
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The title of the paper is exactly stating the contents of the paper. A maximal arc \({\mathcal K}\) of degree \(d\) in a projective plane of order \(n\) is a set of points such that each line of the plane intersects the set in 0 or \(d\) points (hence \(|{\mathcal K}|=nd-n+d\)). If \(1<d<n\), then all the known examples have \(d\) even (note that \(d\) has to divide \(n\)). It is a long standing conjecture that no maximal arcs of odd degree \(d\), \(1<d<n\), exist in projective planes of odd order \(n\). The authors prove that this conjecture is true in case of a Desarguesian plane, no use to say that this is an outstanding result. The proof (which is rather complicated) is based on the so-called polynomial technique. A more simplified proof by the first two authors is going to appear.
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maximal arcs
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Desarguesian projective planes
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