Locked Polyomino Tilings
Jamie Tucker-Foltz

TL;DR
This paper constructs explicit examples of locked tilings with $t$-ominoes on grids, revealing their existence on large and infinite grids, and discusses implications for redistricting algorithms.
Contribution
It provides the first explicit constructions of locked $t$-omino tilings for $t \\geq 3$ on large and infinite grids, challenging assumptions about the irreducibility of redistricting Markov chains.
Findings
Locked 3- and 4-omino tilings exist on arbitrarily large finite square grids.
Locked $t$-omino tilings exist on infinite grids for large $t$.
Existence of locked tilings in weighted grids with few tiles.
Abstract
A locked -omino tiling is a grid tiling by -ominoes such that, if you remove any pair of tiles, the only way to fill in the remaining grid cells with -ominoes is to use the same two tiles in the exact same configuration as before. We exclude degenerate cases where there is only one tiling overall due to small dimensions. It is a classic (and straightforward) result that finite grids do not admit locked 2-omino tilings. In this paper, we construct explicit locked -omino tilings for on grids of various dimensions. Most notably, we show that locked 3- and 4-omino tilings exist on finite square grids of arbitrarily large size, and locked -omino tilings of the infinite grid exist for arbitrarily large . The result for 4-omino tilings in particular is remarkable because they are so rare and difficult to construct: Only a single tiling is known to exist on any…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarkov Chains and Monte Carlo Methods · Advanced Combinatorial Mathematics · Cellular Automata and Applications
