On the longest increasing subsequence and number of cycles of butterfly permutations
John Peca-Medlin, Chenyang Zhong

TL;DR
This paper investigates the properties of butterfly permutations generated via Gaussian elimination, revealing new distributional limits, scaling behaviors, and limit theorems for the longest increasing subsequence and cycle counts, with connections to random matrix theory.
Contribution
It introduces novel distributional descriptions and limit theorems for butterfly permutations, including scaling limits for LIS and cycle counts, and links to random matrix theory and group actions.
Findings
Power law bounds on expected LIS, with exponents between 1/2 and 1.
Full CLT established for the number of cycles scaled by (2-1/p)^n.
Distributional descriptions depend on the prime p, with explicit recursive formulas.
Abstract
One method to generate random permutations involves using Gaussian elimination with partial pivoting (GEPP) on a random matrix and storing the permutation matrix factor from the resulting GEPP factorization . We are interested in exploring properties of random butterfly permutations, which are generated using GEPP on specific random butterfly matrices. Our paper highlights new connections among random matrix theory, numerical linear algebra, group actions of rooted trees, and random permutations. We address the questions of the longest increasing subsequence (LIS) and number of cycles for particular uniform butterfly permutations, with full distributional descriptions and limit theorems for simple butterfly permutations. We also establish scaling limit results and limit theorems for nonsimple butterfly permutations, which include certain -Sylow subgroups of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoding theory and cryptography · graph theory and CDMA systems · Cellular Automata and Applications
