Difference set
- For the set of elements in one set but not another, see relative complement. For the set of differences of pairs of elements, see Minkowski difference.
In combinatorics, a difference set is a subset
of size
of a group
of order
such that every nonidentity element of
can be expressed as a product
of elements of
in exactly
ways. A difference set
is said to be cyclic, abelian, non-abelian, etc., if the group
has the corresponding property. A difference set with
is sometimes called planar or simple.[1] If
is an abelian group written in additive notation, the defining condition is that every nonzero element of
can be written as a difference of elements of
in exactly
ways. The term "difference set" arises in this way.
Basic facts
- A simple counting argument shows that there are exactly
pairs of elements from
that will yield nonidentity elements, so every difference set must satisfy the equation
.
- If
is a difference set, and
, then
is also a difference set, and is called a translate of
(
in additive notation).
- The complement of a
-difference set is a
-difference set.[2]
- The set of all translates of a difference set
forms a symmetric block design, called the development of
and denoted by
. In such a design there are
elements (usually called points) and
blocks (subsets). Each block of the design consists of
points, each point is contained in
blocks. Any two blocks have exactly
elements in common and any two points are simultaneously contained in exactly
blocks. The group
acts as an automorphism group of the design. It is sharply transitive on both points and blocks.[3]
- In particular, if
, then the difference set gives rise to a projective plane. An example of a (7,3,1) difference set in the group
is the subset
. The translates of this difference set form the Fano plane.
- In particular, if
- Since every difference set gives a symmetric design, the parameter set must satisfy the Bruck–Ryser–Chowla theorem.[4]
- Not every symmetric design gives a difference set.[5]
Equivalent and isomorphic difference sets
Two difference sets in group
and
in group
are equivalent if there is a group isomorphism
between
and
such that
for some
. The two difference sets are isomorphic if the designs
and
are isomorphic as block designs.
Equivalent difference sets are isomorphic, but there exist examples of isomorphic difference sets which are not equivalent. In the cyclic difference set case, all known isomorphic difference sets are equivalent.[6]
Multipliers
A multiplier of a difference set in group
is a group automorphism
of
such that
for some
. If
is abelian and
is the automorphism that maps
, then
is called a numerical or Hall multiplier.[7]
It has been conjectured that if p is a prime dividing and not dividing v, then the group automorphism defined by
fixes some translate of D (this is equivalent to being a multiplier). It is known to be true for
when
is an abelian group, and this is known as the First Multiplier Theorem. A more general known result, the Second Multiplier Theorem, says that if
is a
-difference set in an abelian group
of exponent
(the least common multiple of the orders of every element), let
be an integer coprime to
. If there exists a divisor
of
such that for every prime p dividing m, there exists an integer i with
, then t is a numerical divisor.[8]
For example, 2 is a multiplier of the (7,3,1)-difference set mentioned above.
It has been mentioned that a numerical multiplier of a difference set in an abelian group
fixes a translate of
, but it can also be shown that there is a translate of
which is fixed by all numerical multipliers of
.[9]
Parameters
The known difference sets or their complements have one of the following parameter sets:[10]
-difference set for some prime power
and some positive integer
. These are known as the classical parameters and there are many constructions of difference sets having these parameters.
-difference set for some positive integer
. Difference sets with v = 4n - 1 are called Paley-type difference sets.
-difference set for some positive integer
. A difference set with these parameters is a Hadamard difference set.
-difference set for some prime power
and some positive integer
. Known as the McFarland parameters.
-difference set for some positive integer
. Known as the Spence parameters.
-difference set for some prime power
and some positive integer
. Difference sets with these parameters are called Davis-Jedwab-Chen difference sets.
Known difference sets
In many constructions of difference sets the groups that are used are related to the additive and multiplicative groups of finite fields. The notation used to denote these fields differs according to discipline. In this section, is the Galois field of order
, where
is a prime or prime power. The group under addition is denoted by
, while
is the multiplicative group of non-zero elements.
- Paley
-difference set:
- Let
be a prime power. In the group
, let
be the set of all non-zero squares.
- Let
- Singer
-difference set:
- Let
. Then the set
is a
-difference set, where
is the trace function
.
- Let
- Twin prime power
-difference set when
and
are both prime powers:
- In the group
, let
[11]
- In the group
History
The systematic use of cyclic difference sets and methods for the construction of symmetric block designs dates back to R. C. Bose and a seminal paper of his in 1939.[12] However, various examples appeared earlier than this, such as the "Paley Difference Sets" which date back to 1933.[13] The generalization of the cyclic difference set concept to more general groups is due to R.H. Bruck[14] in 1955.[15] Multipliers were introduced by Marshall Hall Jr.[16] in 1947.[17]
Application
It is found by Xia, Zhou and Giannakis that difference sets can be used to construct a complex vector codebook that achieves the difficult Welch bound on maximum cross correlation amplitude. The so-constructed codebook also forms the so-called Grassmannian manifold.
Generalisations
A difference family is a set of subsets
of a group
such that the order of
is
, the size of
is
for all
, and every nonidentity element of
can be expressed as a product
of elements of
for some
(i.e. both
come from the same
) in exactly
ways.
A difference set is a difference family with . The parameter equation above generalises to
.[18]
The development
of a difference family is a 2-design.
Every 2-design with a regular automorphism group is
for some difference family
.
See also
Notes
- ↑ van Lint & Wilson 1992, p. 331
- ↑ Wallis 1988, p. 61 - Theorem 4.5
- ↑ van Lint & Wilson 1992, p. 331 - Theorem 27.2. The theorem only states point transitivity, but block transitivity follows from this by the second corollary on p. 330.
- ↑ Colbourn & Dinitz 2007, p. 420 (18.7 Remark 2)
- ↑ Colbourn & Dinitz 2007, p. 420 (18.7 Remark 1)
- ↑ Colbourn & Diniz 2007, p. 420 (Remark 18.9)
- ↑ van Lint & Wilson 1992, p. 345
- ↑ van Lint & Wilson 1992, p. 349 (Theorem 28.7)
- ↑ Beth, Jungnickel & Lenz 1986, p. 280 (Theorem 4.6)
- ↑ Colburn & Dinitz 2007, pp. 422-425
- ↑ Colbourn & Dinitz 2007, p. 425 (Construction 18.49)
- ↑ Bose, R.C. (1939), "On the construction of balanced incomplete block designs", Annals of Eugenics 9: 353–399, doi:10.1111/j.1469-1809.1939.tb02219.x, JFM 65.1110.04, Zbl 0023.00102
- ↑ Wallis 1988, p. 69
- ↑ Bruck, R.H. (1955), "Difference sets in a finite group", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 78: 464–481, doi:10.2307/1993074, Zbl 0065.13302
- ↑ van Lint & Wilson 1992, p. 340
- ↑ Hall Jr., Marshall (1947), "Cyclic projective planes", Duke Journal of Mathematics 14: 1079–1090, doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-47-01482-8, Zbl 0029.22502
- ↑ Beth, Jungnickel & Lenz 1986, p. 275
- ↑ Beth, Jungnickel & Lenz 1986, p. 310 (2.8.a)
References
- Beth, Thomas; Jungnickel, Dieter; Lenz, Hanfried (1986), Design Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-33334-2, Zbl 0602.05001
- Colbourn, Charles J.; Dinitz, Jeffrey H. (2007), Handbook of Combinatorial Designs, Discrete Mathematics and its Applications (2nd ed.), Boca Raton: Chapman & Hall/ CRC, ISBN 1-58488-506-8, Zbl 1101.05001
- van Lint, J.H.; Wilson, R.M. (1992), A Course in Combinatorics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-42260-4, Zbl 0769.05001
- Wallis, W.D. (1988). Combinatorial Designs. Marcel Dekker. ISBN 0-8247-7942-8. Zbl 0637.05004.
Further reading
- Moore, EH; Pollastek, HSK (2013). Difference Sets: Connecting Algebra, Combinatorics, and Geometry. AMS. ISBN 978-0-8218-9176-6.
- Storer, Thomas (1967). Cyclotomy and difference sets. Chicago: Markham Publishing Company. Zbl 0157.03301.
- Xia, Pengfei; Zhou, Shengli; Giannakis, Georgios B. (2005). "Achieving the Welch Bound with Difference Sets" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Information Theory 51 (5): 1900–1907. doi:10.1109/TIT.2005.846411. ISSN 0018-9448. Zbl 1237.94007..
- Xia, Pengfei; Zhou, Shengli; Giannakis, Georgios B. (2006). "Correction to ``Achieving the Welch bound with difference sets"". IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory 52 (7): 3359. doi:10.1109/tit.2006.876214. Zbl 1237.94008.
- Zwillinger, Daniel (2003). CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae. CRC Press. p. 246. ISBN 1-58488-291-3.