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Antisquares and Critical Exponents

Authors :
Baranwal, Aseem
Currie, James
Mol, Lucas
Ochem, Pascal
Rampersad, Narad
Shallit, Jeffrey
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
arXiv, 2022.

Abstract

The complement $\bar{x}$ of a binary word $x$ is obtained by changing each $0$ in $x$ to $1$ and vice versa. An antisquare is a nonempty word of the form $x\, \bar{x}$. In this paper, we study infinite binary words that do not contain arbitrarily large antisquares. For example, we show that the repetition threshold for the language of infinite binary words containing exactly two distinct antisquares is $(5+\sqrt{5})/2$. We also study repetition thresholds for related classes, where "two" in the previous sentence is replaced by a large number. We say a binary word is good if the only antisquares it contains are $01$ and $10$. We characterize the minimal antisquares, that is, those words that are antisquares but all proper factors are good. We determine the the growth rate of the number of good words of length $n$ and determine the repetition threshold between polynomial and exponential growth for the number of good words.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e48a95fb352436e610308e93c5e5bf86
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2209.09223