Abstract

The Boolean lattice $2^{[n]}$ is the power set of $[n]$ ordered by inclusion. A chain $c_{0}\subset\cdots\subset c_{k}$ in $2^{[n]}$ is rank-symmetric, if $|c_{i}|+|c_{k-i}|=n$ for $i=0,\ldots,k$; and it is symmetric, if $|c_{i}|=(n-k)/2+i$. We show that there exist a bijection $$p: [n]^{(\geq n/2)}\rightarrow [n]^{(\leq n/2)}$$ and a partial ordering $<$ on $[n]^{(\geq n/2)}$ satisfying the following properties:$\subset$ is an extension of $<$ on $[n]^{(\geq n/2)}$;if $C\subset [n]^{(\geq n/2)}$ is a chain with respect to $<$, then $p(C)\cup C$ is a rank-symmetric chain in $2^{[n]}$, where $p(C)=\{p(x): x\in C\}$;the poset $([n]^{(\geq n/2)},<)$ has the so called normalized matching property.We show two applications of this result.A conjecture of Füredi asks if $2^{[n]}$ can be partitioned into $\binom{n}{\lfloor n/2\rfloor}$ chains such that the size of any two chains differ by at most 1. We prove an asymptotic version of this conjecture with the additional condition that every chain in the partition is rank-symmetric: $2^{[n]}$ can be partitioned into $\binom{n}{\lfloor n/2\rfloor}$ rank-symmetric chains, each of size $\Theta(\sqrt{n})$.Our second application gives a lower bound for the number of symmetric chain partitions of $2^{[n]}$. We show that $2^{[n]}$ has at least $2^{\Omega(2^{n}\log n/\sqrt{n})}$ symmetric chain partitions.

Highlights

  • Let us introduce the main definitions and notation used throughout the paper

  • We prove that there exist a bijection p : [n]( n/2) → [n]( n/2)

  • We prove an asymptotic version of this conjecture with the additional condition that every chain in the partition is rank-symmetric: 2[n] can be partitioned into √

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Summary

Introduction

Let us introduce the main definitions and notation used throughout the paper. The notation is mostly standard and can be found in [1], for example. The Boolean lattice 2[n] can be partitioned into n n/2 rank-symmetric chains such that the size of any two chains differ in at most. To demonstrate the difficulty of the problem, we challenge the reader to think about the following much weaker result: if h is fixed and n is sufficiently large, 2[n] can be partitioned into rank-symmetric chains, each of size at least h. While this problem is not too hard in the case we do not demand our chains to be rank-symmetric, we have to overcome extra obstacles in the rank-symmetric case. We establish a nontrivial lower bound for the number of matchings in an arbitrary normalized matching graph

The proof of Theorem 1
Partitioning the Boolean lattice into rank-symmetric chains of uniform size
The number of symmetric chain partitions of the Boolean lattice
Open problems
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