Triple-product-free sets (Q6666499)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7970439
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| English | Triple-product-free sets |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7970439 |
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Triple-product-free sets (English)
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20 January 2025
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Let \(G\) be a group. A non-empty subset \(S \subseteq G\) is triple-product-free if \(abc \not \in S\) for all \(a, b, c \in S\). Further, \(S\) is said to be locally maximal triple-product-free if \(S\) is triple-product-free and not properly contained in any other triple-product-free set.\N\NIn the paper under review, the authors classify all groups containing a locally maximal triple-product-free set of size 1. Theorem 2.2: Let \(S\) be a locally maximal triple-product-free set of size 1 in a group \(G\). Then \(G\) is isomorphic to one of \(C_{3}\), \(C_{4}\), \(C_{5}\), \(D_{6}\), \(D_{8}\), \(Q_{8}\) or \(D_{10}\). In Theorem 3.5, they derive necessary and sufficient conditions for a subset of a group to be locally maximal triple-product-free.\N\NIt is interesting to note that the largest possible orders of a group containing a locally maximal product-free set of size \(k\), for \(k = 1, 2, 3, 4\) respectively are \(8, 16, 24, 40\), with computer experiment strongly suggesting 64 for \(k=5\) (see the first author's PhD thesis, 2022).
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sum-free set
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product-free set
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solution-free set
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triple-product-free set
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0.890913724899292
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0.8294706344604492
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0.7956503033638
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0.7809821367263794
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0.7755146622657776
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