Abstract

Let $S_{n}$ denote the set of permutations of $[n]=\{1,2,\dots, n\}$. For a positive integer $k$, define $S_{n,k}$ to be the set of all permutations of $[n]$ with exactly $k$ disjoint cycles, i.e.,\[ S_{n,k} = \{\pi \in S_{n}: \pi = c_{1}c_{2} \cdots c_{k}\},\] where $c_1,c_2,\dots ,c_k$ are disjoint cycles. The size of $S_{n,k}$ is $\left [ \begin{matrix}n\\ k \end{matrix}\right]=(-1)^{n-k}s(n,k)$, where $s(n,k)$ is the Stirling number of the first kind. A family $\mathcal{A} \subseteq S_{n,k}$ is said to be $t$-cycle-intersecting if any two elements of $\mathcal{A}$ have at least $t$ common cycles. In this paper we show that, given any positive integers $k,t$ with $k\geq t+1$, if $\mathcal{A} \subseteq S_{n,k}$ is $t$-cycle-intersecting and $n\ge n_{0}(k,t)$ where $n_{0}(k,t) = O(k^{t+2})$, then \[ |\mathcal{A}| \le \left [ \begin{matrix}n-t\\ k-t \end{matrix}\right],\]with equality if and only if $\mathcal{A}$ is the stabiliser of $t$ fixed points.

Highlights

  • Let [n] = {1, . . . , n}, and let [n] k denote the family of all k-subsets of [n]

  • Ahlswede and Khachatrian [1] extended the Erdos-Ko-Rado theorem by determining the structure of all t-intersecting set systems of maximum size for all possible n

  • There have been many recent results showing that a version of the Erdos-Ko-Rado theorem holds for combinatorial objects other than set systems

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Summary

Introduction

Ellis, Friedgut and Pilpel [11] have settled an old conjecture of Deza and Frankl regarding an analogue of the Erdos-Ko-Rado theorem for permutations. They showed that for sufficiently large n depending on t, a t-intersecting family A of Sn has size at most (n − t)!, with equality if and only if A is a coset of the stabilizer of t points. Their proof uses spectral methods and representations of the symmetric group. With equality if and only if A is the stabiliser of t fixed points, i.e. A consists of all permutations in Sn,k with some t fixed cycles of length one

Stirling number revisited
Proof of Theorem 2
Dependence of n on k and t
Concluding remarks

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