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arxiv: 1110.0160 · v2 · pith:A5ODDMCEnew · submitted 2011-10-02 · 🧮 math.PR · math.CO

A pattern theorem for random sorting networks

classification 🧮 math.PR math.CO
keywords sortingnetworkpatternrandomprobabilityswapstendsuniformly
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A sorting network is a shortest path from 12..n to n..21 in the Cayley graph of the symmetric group S(n) generated by nearest-neighbor swaps. A pattern is a sequence of swaps that forms an initial segment of some sorting network. We prove that in a uniformly random n-element sorting network, any fixed pattern occurs in at least cn^2 disjoint space-time locations, with probability tending to 1 exponentially fast as n tends to infinity. Here c is a positive constant which depends on the choice of pattern. As a consequence, the probability that the uniformly random sorting network is geometrically realizable tends to 0.

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