Note on a Conjecture of Graham
Abstract
An old conjecture of Graham stated that if is a prime and is a sequence of terms from the cyclic group such that all (nontrivial) zero-sum subsequences have the same length, then must contain at most two distinct terms. In 1976, Erd\H{o}s and Szemeredi gave a proof of the conjecture for sufficiently large primes . However, the proof was complicated enough that the details for small primes were never worked out. Both in the paper of Erd\H{o}s and Szemeredi and in a later survey by Erd\H{o}s and Graham, the complexity of the proof was lamented. Recently, a new proof, valid even for non-primes , was given by Gao, Hamidoune and Wang, using Savchev and Chen's recently proved structure theorem for zero-sum free sequences of long length in . However, as this is a fairly involved result, they did not believe it to be the simple proof sought by Erd\H{o}s, Graham and Szemeredi. In this paper, we give a short proof of the original conjecture that uses only the Cauchy-Davenport Theorem and pigeonhole principle, thus perhaps qualifying as a simple proof. Replacing the use of the Cauchy-Davenport Theorem with the Devos-Goddyn-Mohar Theorem, we obtain an alternate proof, albeit not as simple, of the non-prime case. Additionally, our method yields an exhaustive list detailing the precise structure of and works for an arbitrary finite abelian group, though the only non-cyclic group for which this is nontrivial is .
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.0903.3200,
title = {Note on a Conjecture of Graham},
author = {David J. Grynkiewicz},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0903.3200},
year = {2009}
}