Abstract

We consider domino tilings of $3$-dimensional cubiculated regions. A three-dimensional domino is a $2\times 1\times 1$ rectangular cuboid. We are particularly interested in regions of the form $\mathcal{R}_N = \mathcal{D} \times [0,N]$ where $\mathcal{D} \subset \mathbb{R}^2$ is a fixed quadriculated disk. In dimension $3$, the twist associates to each tiling $\mathbf{t}$ an integer $\operatorname{Tw}(\mathbf{t})$. We prove that, when $N$ goes to infinity, the twist follows a normal distribution.
 A flip is a local move: two neighboring parallel dominoes are removed and placed back in a different position. The twist is invariant under flips. A quadriculated disk $\mathcal{D}$ is regular if, whenever two tilings $\mathbf{t}_0$ and $\mathbf{t}_1$ of $\mathcal{R}_N$ satisfy $\operatorname{Tw}(\mathbf{t}_0) = \operatorname{Tw}(\mathbf{t}_1)$, $\mathbf{t}_0$ and $\mathbf{t}_1$ can be joined by a sequence of flips provided some extra vertical space is allowed.
 Many large disks are regular, including rectangles $\mathcal{D} = [0,L] \times [0,M]$ with $LM$ even and $\min\{L,M\} \ge 3$. For regular disks, we describe the larger connected components under flips of the set of tilings of the region $\mathcal{R}_N = \mathcal{D} \times [0,N]$. As a corollary, let $p_N$ be the probability that two random tilings $\mathbf{T}_0$ and $\mathbf{T}_1$ of $\mathcal{D} \times [0,N]$ can be joined by a sequence of flips conditional to their twists being equal. Then $p_N$ tends to $1$ if and only if $\mathcal{D}$ is regular.
 Under a suitable equivalence relation, the set of tilings has a group structure, the {\em domino group} $G_{\mathcal{D}}$. These results illustrate the fact that the domino group dictates many properties of the space of tilings of the cylinder $\mathcal{R}_N = \mathcal{D} \times [0,N]$, particularly for large $N$.

Highlights

  • We describe the larger connected components under flips of the set of tilings of the region relation ≡ in T (RN) = D × [0, N ]

  • A quadriculated region D ⊂ R2 is a planar quadriculated disk if D is the union of finitely many closed unit squares with vertices in Z2 and D is homeomorphic to the closed unit disk

  • We always assume that our quadriculated regions D are balanced

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Summary

Introduction

A quadriculated region D ⊂ R2 is a planar quadriculated disk if D is the union of finitely many closed unit squares with vertices in Z2 and D is homeomorphic to the closed unit disk. The theorem is restricted to cylinders (not just boxes) In this introduction we state simpler results, with an emphasis on the main examples: the electronic journal of combinatorics 28(1) (2021), #P1.28 regular disks and the twist. Our first main result establishes normal distribution of the twist for tilings of nontrivial cylinders. Notice that vertical floors can be moved up and down via flips (this is not hard, and follows from Lemma 5.2 in [7]): in a fat component, there exists a tiling such that the last M floors are vertical. These results are more general and imply Theorem 4 Their statements make essential use of the domino group GD. This is closely related to studying random paths in a finite graph and uses the Perron-Frobenius Theorem. The author is thankful for the generous support of CNPq, CAPES and FAPERJ (Brazil)

Review and results
Random tilings and proof of Theorem 9
Cocycles
Proof of Theorem 11
Proof of Theorem 12
Final remarks

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