Counting abelian squares (Q2380226): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 06:55, 5 March 2024
scientific article
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English | Counting abelian squares |
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Counting abelian squares (English)
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26 March 2010
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Summary: An abelian square is a nonempty string of length \(2n\) where the last \(n\) symbols form a permutation of the first \(n\) symbols. Similarly, an abelian \(r\)'th power is a concatenation of \(r\) blocks, each of length \(n\), where each block is a permutation of the first \(n\) symbols. In this note we point out that some familiar combinatorial identities can be interpreted in terms of abelian powers. We count the number of abelian squares and give an asymptotic estimate of this quantity.
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abelian powers
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