English

Interval parking functions

Combinatorics 2020-10-30 v3

Abstract

Interval parking functions (IPFs) are a generalization of ordinary parking functions in which each car is willing to park only in a fixed interval of spaces. Each interval parking function can be expressed as a pair (a,b)(a,b), where aa is a parking function and bb is a dual parking function. We say that a pair of permutations (x,y)(x,y) is \emph{reachable} if there is an IPF (a,b)(a,b) such that x,yx,y are the outcomes of a,ba,b, respectively, as parking functions. Reachability is reflexive and antisymmetric, but not in general transitive. We prove that its transitive closure, the \emph{pseudoreachability order}, is precisely the bubble-sort order on the symmetric group \Symn\Sym_n, which can be expressed in terms of the normal form of a permutation in the sense of du~Cloux; in particular, it is isomorphic to the product of chains of lengths 2,,n2,\dots,n. It is thus seen to be a special case of Armstrong's sorting order, which lies between the Bruhat and (left) weak orders.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2006.09321,
  title  = {Interval parking functions},
  author = {Emma Colaric and Ryan DeMuse and Jeremy L. Martin and Mei Yin},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2006.09321},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

12 pages; final version to appear in Advances in Applied Mathematics. Section 9, dealing with enumeration of reachable pairs, has been removed