English

Wilf collapse in permutation classes

Combinatorics 2019-10-01 v1

Abstract

For a hereditary permutation class C\mathcal{C}, we say that two permutations π\pi and σ\sigma of C\mathcal{C} are Wilf-equivalent in C\mathcal{C}, if C\mathcal{C} has the same number of permutations avoiding π\pi as those avoiding σ\sigma. We say that a permutation class C\mathcal{C} exhibits a Wilf collapse if the number of permutations of size nn in C\mathcal{C} is asymptotically larger than the number of Wilf-equivalence classes formed by these permutations. In this paper, we show that Wilf collapse is a surprisingly common phenomenon. Among other results, we show that Wilf collapse occurs in any permutation class with unbounded growth and finitely many sum-indecomposable permutations. Our proofs are based on encoding the elements of a permutation class C\mathcal{C} as words, and analyzing the structure of a random permutation in C\mathcal{C} using this representation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1909.13348,
  title  = {Wilf collapse in permutation classes},
  author = {Michael Albert and Vít Jelínek and Michal Opler},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.13348},
  year   = {2019}
}