scholarly journals Representations of the Symmetric Group as Special Cases of the Boson Polynomials in U(n)

Author(s):  
L. C. Biedenharn ◽  
J. D. Louck
10.37236/3226 ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandro H. Morales ◽  
Ekaterina A. Vassilieva

We evaluate combinatorially certain connection coefficients of the symmetric group that count the number of factorizations of a long cycle as a product of three permutations. Such factorizations admit an important topological interpretation in terms of unicellular constellations on orientable surfaces. Algebraic computation of these coefficients was first done by Jackson using irreducible characters of the symmetric group. However, bijective computations of these coefficients are so far limited to very special cases. Thanks to a new bijection that refines the work of Schaeffer and Vassilieva, we give an explicit closed form evaluation of the generating series for these coefficients. The main ingredient in the bijection is a modified oriented tricolored tree tractable to enumerate. Finally, reducing this bijection to factorizations of a long cycle into two permutations, we get the analogue formula for the corresponding generating series.


1958 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.L. Miksa ◽  
L. Moser ◽  
M. Wyman

In this paper we consider the following combinatorial problem. In how many ways can n distinguishable objects be placed into an unrestricted number of indistinguishable boxes, if each box can hold at most r objects? Let us denote this number by Gn, rSpecial cases of this problem have been the object of considerable study. In the case r = 2 we have the numbers Gn, 2 = Tn which have been treated by Rothe [12] as early as 1800. Tn is also the number of solutions of x2 = 1 in the symmetric group on n letters , and in this and related guises has been studied by Touchard [13], Chowla, Herstein and Moore [3] and two of the present authors [7].


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (05) ◽  
pp. 1750028
Author(s):  
Andrew Marshall

We investigate the space [Formula: see text] of images of linearly embedded finite simplicial complexes in [Formula: see text] isomorphic to a given complex [Formula: see text], focusing on two special cases: [Formula: see text] is the [Formula: see text]-skeleton [Formula: see text] of an [Formula: see text]-simplex, and [Formula: see text] is the [Formula: see text]-skeleton [Formula: see text] of an [Formula: see text]-simplex, so [Formula: see text] has codimension 2 in [Formula: see text], in both cases. The main result is that for [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] (for either [Formula: see text]) deformation retracts to a subspace homeomorphic to the double mapping cylinder [Formula: see text] where [Formula: see text] is the alternating group and [Formula: see text] the symmetric group. The resulting fundamental group provides an example of a generalization of the braid group, which is the fundamental group of the configuration space of points in the plane.


1966 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sahib Ram Mandan

The main purpose of this paper is to prove the proposition: “A set of r mutually perspective (m.p.) (s—1)-simplexes have the same [s−2] (say x) of perspectivity, if and only if their centres of perspectivity (c.p.) lie in an [r−2] (say y); there then arises another such set of s m.p. (r—1)-simplexes, having the same rs vertices, which have y as their common [r−2] of perspectivity such that their c.p. lie in x.” The proposition is true in any [k] for k = s−1, s,…, r+s−2 (r ≦ s). The configuration of the proposition in [r+s−2] arises from the incidences of any r+s arbitrary primes therein and is therefore invariant under the symmetric group of permutations of r+s objects, and that in [r+s−3] is self-dual and therefore self- polar for a quadric therein. Some special cases of some interest for r = s are deduced. The treatment is an illustration of the elegance of the Möbius Barycentric Calculus ([15], pp. 136–143; [1], p. 71).


Author(s):  
M. Isaacson ◽  
M.L. Collins ◽  
M. Listvan

Over the past five years it has become evident that radiation damage provides the fundamental limit to the study of blomolecular structure by electron microscopy. In some special cases structural determinations at very low doses can be achieved through superposition techniques to study periodic (Unwin & Henderson, 1975) and nonperiodic (Saxton & Frank, 1977) specimens. In addition, protection methods such as glucose embedding (Unwin & Henderson, 1975) and maintenance of specimen hydration at low temperatures (Taylor & Glaeser, 1976) have also shown promise. Despite these successes, the basic nature of radiation damage in the electron microscope is far from clear. In general we cannot predict exactly how different structures will behave during electron Irradiation at high dose rates. Moreover, with the rapid rise of analytical electron microscopy over the last few years, nvicroscopists are becoming concerned with questions of compositional as well as structural integrity. It is important to measure changes in elemental composition arising from atom migration in or loss from the specimen as a result of electron bombardment.


Author(s):  
H. Bethge

Besides the atomic surface structure, diverging in special cases with respect to the bulk structure, the real structure of a surface Is determined by the step structure. Using the decoration technique /1/ it is possible to image step structures having step heights down to a single lattice plane distance electron-microscopically. For a number of problems the knowledge of the monatomic step structures is important, because numerous problems of surface physics are directly connected with processes taking place at these steps, e.g. crystal growth or evaporation, sorption and nucleatlon as initial stage of overgrowth of thin films.To demonstrate the decoration technique by means of evaporation of heavy metals Fig. 1 from our former investigations shows the monatomic step structure of an evaporated NaCI crystal. of special Importance Is the detection of the movement of steps during the growth or evaporation of a crystal. From the velocity of a step fundamental quantities for the molecular processes can be determined, e.g. the mean free diffusion path of molecules.


Author(s):  
Alexei Borodin ◽  
Grigori Olshanski

Methodology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel C. Voelkle ◽  
Patrick E. McKnight

The use of latent curve models (LCMs) has increased almost exponentially during the last decade. Oftentimes, researchers regard LCM as a “new” method to analyze change with little attention paid to the fact that the technique was originally introduced as an “alternative to standard repeated measures ANOVA and first-order auto-regressive methods” (Meredith & Tisak, 1990, p. 107). In the first part of the paper, this close relationship is reviewed, and it is demonstrated how “traditional” methods, such as the repeated measures ANOVA, and MANOVA, can be formulated as LCMs. Given that latent curve modeling is essentially a large-sample technique, compared to “traditional” finite-sample approaches, the second part of the paper addresses the question to what degree the more flexible LCMs can actually replace some of the older tests by means of a Monte-Carlo simulation. In addition, a structural equation modeling alternative to Mauchly’s (1940) test of sphericity is explored. Although “traditional” methods may be expressed as special cases of more general LCMs, we found the equivalence holds only asymptotically. For practical purposes, however, no approach always outperformed the other alternatives in terms of power and type I error, so the best method to be used depends on the situation. We provide detailed recommendations of when to use which method.


KYAMC Journal ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 122-125
Author(s):  
Ashraf Uddin Mallik ◽  
Mostafizur Rahman ◽  
Fatema Bagum ◽  
Uttam Karmaker ◽  
Baikali Ferdous ◽  
...  

Penile fracture is an uncommon urological emergency, especially in Bangladesh. The other name is traumatic rupture of the tunica albuginea and corpora cavernosa in the erect penis. It occurs when an erect penis face to buckle under the pressure of a blunt sexual trauma. Patient gives the typical history of immediate detumescence, severe pain, swelling and eggplant deformity of the penile shaft due to penile injury. Immediate surgical exploration and repair of corpora Cavernosa with tunica albugenia is the most effective treatment modality. In normal cases diagnosis is made from history, physical examination alone. In some special cases ultrasonogram, radiological images, including retrograde urethrography or cavernosography are mandatory for proper diagnosis. KYAMC Journal Vol. 10, No.-2, July 2019, Page 122-125


Author(s):  
Markus Krötzsch

To reason with existential rules (a.k.a. tuple-generating dependencies), one often computes universal models. Among the many such models of different structure and cardinality, the core is arguably the “best”. Especially for finitely satisfiable theories, where the core is the unique smallest universal model, it has advantages in query answering, non-monotonic reasoning, and data exchange. Unfortunately, computing cores is difficult and not supported by most reasoners. We therefore propose ways of computing cores using practically implemented methods from rule reasoning and answer set programming. Our focus is on cases where the standard chase algorithm produces a core. We characterise this desirable situation in general terms that apply to a large class of cores, derive concrete approaches for decidable special cases, and generalise these approaches to non-monotonic extensions of existential rules.


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