'Mixing number' of permutations

p.j.cameron at qmul.ac.uk p.j.cameron at qmul.ac.uk
Thu Aug 17 14:47:46 CEST 2006


Sequence A003319 counts permutations with no boundaries.
This seems to be not too much short of the total number, so I guess the
average is quite small.

On Thu, Aug 17, 2006 at 02:29:59PM +0200, Hugo Pfoertner wrote:
> SeqFans,
> 
> today Hauke Reddmann started a new thread in the NG sci.math
> 
> http://groups.google.com/group/sci.math/msg/b1c1164b936c6dca
> 
> <<
> For easyness, I use the data of my lest chess tournament :-)
> The finish in terms of the starting numbers was
> 7 1 6 4 3 8 5 2|9|10|14 15 20 13 18 16 23 22 12 26 11 17 19 27 25 21
> 24|28
> 
> A | marks boundaries between consecutive number subsets that permute
> to themselves. Note that I (the 16) also permute to myself, but there
> are number crossing from both sides and so this is no boundary.
> 
> Obvious question: How many boundaries occur in a random permutation?
> Clearly a tournament is about the opposite of random, as the swap
> numbers will be low.
> 
> Example n=3
> 
> 1|2|3
> 1|3 2
> 2 1|3
> 2 3 1
> 3 1 2
> 3 2 1
> -- 
> Hauke Reddmann <:-EX8    fc3a501 at uni-hamburg.de
> His-Ala-Sec-Lys-Glu Arg-Glu-Asp-Asp-Met-Ala-Asn-Asn
> >>
> 
> Is there anything in the OEIS that can answer his question? Any other
> ideas?
> 
> Can you please CC answers also to Hauke; AFAIK he is not member of the
> Seqfan community.
> 
> Hugo Pfoertner






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