Paradoxes of two-length interval orders (Q2266725): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 09:22, 30 July 2024
scientific article
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English | Paradoxes of two-length interval orders |
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Paradoxes of two-length interval orders (English)
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1984
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The concept of a two-length interval order is introduced. With the shorter length fixed at 1, let L denote the set of admissible longer lengths for which this concept holds for a given interval order. The paper demonstrates that there are two-length interval orders on finite point sets with the following sets L for each integer \(m\geq 2:\) \(L=(1,m)\); \(L=(2-1/m,2)\cup (m,\infty)\); \(L=(m,2m-1)\cup (2m-1,\infty)\). The second case shows that L can have an arbitrarily big gap between admissible longer length, and the third case leads to the corollary that there can be arbitrarily many gaps or holes in L.
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two-length interval order
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