English

On a problem of Molluzzo concerning Steinhaus triangles in finite cyclic groups

Combinatorics 2016-03-23 v2 Number Theory

Abstract

Let XX be a finite sequence of length m1m\geq 1 in Z/nZ\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z}. The \textit{derived sequence} X\partial X of XX is the sequence of length m1m-1 obtained by pairwise adding consecutive terms of XX. The collection of iterated derived sequences of XX, until length 1 is reached, determines a triangle, the \textit{Steinhaus triangle ΔX\Delta X generated by the sequence XX}. We say that XX is \textit{balanced} if its Steinhaus triangle ΔX\Delta X contains each element of Z/nZ\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z} with the same multiplicity. An obvious necessary condition for mm to be the length of a balanced sequence in Z/nZ\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z} is that nn divides the binomial coefficient (m+12)\binom{m+1}{2}. It is an open problem to determine whether this condition on mm is also sufficient. This problem was posed by Hugo Steinhaus in 1963 for n=2n=2 and generalized by John C. Molluzzo in 1976 for n3n\geq3. So far, only the case n=2n=2 has been solved, by Heiko Harborth in 1972. In this paper, we answer positively Molluzzo's problem in the case n=3kn=3^k for all k1k\geq1. Moreover, for every odd integer n3n\geq3, we construct infinitely many balanced sequences in Z/nZ\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z}. This is achieved by analysing the Steinhaus triangles generated by arithmetic progressions. In contrast, for any nn even with n4n\geq4, it is not known whether there exist infinitely many balanced sequences in Z/nZ\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z}. As for arithmetic progressions, still for nn even, we show that they are never balanced, except for exactly 8 cases occurring at n=2n=2 and n=6n=6.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0801.0395,
  title  = {On a problem of Molluzzo concerning Steinhaus triangles in finite cyclic groups},
  author = {Jonathan Chappelon},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0801.0395},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

29 pages, 10 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:59:00.792Z