Omitting parentheses from the cyclic notation (Q892114)
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| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Omitting parentheses from the cyclic notation |
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Omitting parentheses from the cyclic notation (English)
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18 November 2015
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Write a permutation \(\pi\) in cyclic notation, \((a_{1,1}, \dots, a_{k_1,1}) (a_{1,2}, \dots, a_{k_2,2})\cdots\) \((a_{1,m}, \dots, a_{k_m,m})\) (fixed-points being written as ``cycles'' with one element). Denote by \(\lambda\) the \(m\)-tuple \((k_1, \ldots, k_m)\). Obtain a new permutation by omitting the parentheses and viewing the resulting list as the one-line notation of the permutation that takes \(j\) to the \(j\)-th item of the list. The paper considers the image \(C_{\lambda}\) under this function of the set of permutations having given \(\lambda\), as a poset under the Bruhat-Chevalley order. Each poset \(C_{\lambda}\) has a greatest and a least element. All maximal chains are of the same length \(l\), which is determined. If \(c_i\) denotes the number of elements at height \(i\), then the sequence \((c_0, \dots, c_l)\) is symmetric and unimodal, and \(\sum c_iq^i\) is a polynomial that factors as a product of polynomials of the form \(1 + q + q^2 + \dots + q^j\). The poset is lexicographically shellable.
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Bruhat order
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graded posets
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unimodality
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lexicographic shellability
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symmetric group
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