Alternating sign hypermatrix decompositions of Latin-like squares
Citation
O'Brien, C. (2020) 'Alternating sign hypermatrix decompositions of Latin-like squares', Advances in Applied Mathematics, 121, 102097, available: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aam.2020.102097.
O'Brien, C. (2020) 'Alternating sign hypermatrix decompositions of Latin-like squares', Advances in Applied Mathematics, 121, 102097, available: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aam.2020.102097.
Abstract
To any n × n Latin square L, we may associate a unique
sequence of mutually orthogonal permutation matrices P =
P_1, P_2, ..., P_n such that L = L(P ) = ∑ k_Pk . Brualdi and
Dahl (2018) described a generalisation of a Latin square,
called an alternating sign hypermatrix Latin-like square
(ASHL), by replacing P with an alternating sign hypermatrix
(ASHM). An ASHM is an n × n × n (0,1,-1)-hypermatrix
in which the non-zero elements in each row, column, and
vertical line alternate in sign, beginning and ending with 1.
Since every sequence of n mutually orthogonal permutation
matrices forms the planes of a unique n × n × n ASHM, this
generalisation of Latin squares follows very naturally, with an
ASHM A having corresponding ASHL L = L(A) = ∑ kA_k ,
where A_k is the kth plane of A. This paper addresses
open problems posed in Brualdi and Dahl’s article, firstly
by characterising how pairs of ASHMs with the same
corresponding ASHL relate to one another and identifying the
smallest dimension for which this can happen, and secondly by
exploring the maximum number of times a particular integer
may occur as an entry of an n × n ASHL. A construction
is given for an n × n ASHL with the same entry occurring
(n^2 +4n−19)/2 times, improving on the previous best of 2n.
Keywords
Alternating sign matrixASM
Latin square
Hypermatrix