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Block‐avoiding point sequencings
Author(s) -
Blackburn Simon R.,
Etzion Tuvi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of combinatorial designs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.618
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1520-6610
pISSN - 1063-8539
DOI - 10.1002/jcd.21770
Subject(s) - combinatorics , mathematics , disjoint sets , steiner system , block (permutation group theory) , greedy algorithm , combinatorial design , abelian group , discrete mathematics , pairwise comparison , upper and lower bounds , algorithm , mathematical analysis , statistics
Let n and ℓ be positive integers. Recent papers by Kreher, Stinson, and Veitch have explored variants of the problem of ordering the points in a triple system (such as a Steiner triple system [STS], directed triple system, or Mendelsohn triple system) on n points so that no block occurs in a segment of ℓ consecutive entries (thus the ordering is locally block‐avoiding). We describe a greedy algorithm which shows that such an ordering exists, provided that n is sufficiently large when compared with  ℓ . This algorithm leads to improved bounds on the number of points in cases where this was known, but also extends the results to a significantly more general setting (which includes, e.g., orderings that avoid the blocks of a design). Similar results for a cyclic variant of this situation are also established. We construct STSs and quadruple systems where ℓ can be large, showing that a bound of Stinson and Veitch is reasonable. Moreover, we generalize the Stinson–Veitch bound to a wider class of block designs and to the cyclic case. The results of Kreher, Stinson, and Veitch were originally inspired by results of Alspach, Kreher, and Pastine, who (motivated by zero‐sum avoiding sequences in abelian groups) were interested in orderings of points in a partial Steiner triple system where no segment is a union of disjoint blocks. Alspach et al. show that, when the system contains at most k pairwise disjoint blocks, an ordering exists when the number of points is more than 15 k − 5 . By making use of a greedy approach, the paper improves this bound to 9 k + O ( k 2 ∕ 3 ) .

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