Diagonal groups and arcs over groups
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Publication:6352662
DOI10.1007/S10623-021-00907-2arXiv2010.16338MaRDI QIDQ6352662
Cheryl E. Praeger, R. A. Bailey, Peter J. Cameron, Michael K. Kinyon
Publication date: 30 October 2020
Abstract: In an earlier paper by three of the present authors and Csaba Schneider, it was shown that, for , a set of partitions of a set , any of which are the minimal non-trivial elements of a Cartesian lattice, either form a Latin square (if ), or generate a join-semilattice of dimension associated with a diagonal group over a base group . In this paper we investigate what happens if we have partitions with , any of which are minimal elements of a Cartesian lattice. If , this is just a set of mutually orthogonal Latin squares. We consider the case where all these squares are isotopic to Cayley tables of groups, and give an example to show the groups need not be all isomorphic. For , things are more restricted. Any of the partitions generate a join-semilattice admitting a diagonal group over a group . It may be that the groups are all isomorphic, though we cannot prove this. Under an extra hypothesis, we show that must be abelian and must have three fixed-point-free automorphisms whose product is the identity. Under this hypothesis, such a structure gives an orthogonal array, and conversely in some cases. If the group is cyclic of prime order , then the structure corresponds exactly to an arc of cardinality in the -dimensional projective space over the field with elements, so all known results about arcs are applicable. More generally, arcs over a finite field of order give examples where is the elementary abelian group of order . These examples can be lifted to non-elementary abelian groups using -adic techniques.
Finite automorphism groups of algebraic, geometric, or combinatorial structures (20B25) Orthogonal arrays, Latin squares, Room squares (05B15) Factorial statistical designs (62K15) Incidence structures embeddable into projective geometries (51A45) Combinatorial codes (94B25)
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