Counting prime juggling patterns
Combinatorics
2015-11-16 v2
Abstract
Juggling patterns can be described by a closed walk in a (directed) state graph, where each vertex (or state) is a landing pattern for the balls and directed edges connect states that can occur consecutively. The number of such patterns of length is well known, but a long-standing problem is to count the number of prime juggling patterns (those juggling patterns corresponding to cycles in the state graph). For the case of balls we give an expression for the number of prime juggling patterns of length by establishing a connection with partitions of into distinct parts. From this we show the number of two-ball prime juggling patterns of length is where . For larger we show there are at least prime cycles of length .
Cite
@article{arxiv.1508.05296,
title = {Counting prime juggling patterns},
author = {Esther Banaian and Steve Butler and Christopher Cox and Jeffrey Davis and Jacob Landgraf and Scarlitte Ponce},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1508.05296},
year = {2015}
}