





























Let $n\geq 1$ and $X_{n}$ be the random variable representing the size of the smallest component of a random combinatorial object made of $n$ elements. A combinatorial object could be a permutation, a monic polynomial over a finite field, a surjective map, a graph, and so on. By a random combinatorial object, we mean a combinatorial object that is chosen uniformly at random among all possible combinatorial objects of size $n$. It is understood that a component of a permutation is a cycle, an irreducible factor for a monic polynomial, a connected component for a graph, etc. Combinatorial objects are categorized into parametric classes. In this article, we focus on the exp-log class with parameter $K=1$ (permutations, derangements, polynomials over finite field, etc.) and $K=1/2$ (surjective maps, $2$-regular graphs, etc.) The generalized Buchstab function $Ω_{K}$ plays an important role in evaluating probabilistic and statistical quantities. For $K=1$, Theorem $5$ from \cite{PanRic_2001_small_explog} stipulates that $\mathrm{Var}(X_{n})=C(n+O(n^{-ε}))$ for some $ε>0$ and sufficiently large $n$. We revisit the evaluation of $C=1.3070\ldots$ using different methods: analytic estimation using tools from complex analysis, numerical integration using Taylor expansions, and computation of the exact distributions for $n\leq 4000$ using the recursive nature of the counting problem. In general for any $K$, Theorem $1.1$ from \cite{BenMasPanRic_2003} connects the quantity $1/Ω_{K}(x)$ for $x\geq 1$ with the asymptotic proportion of $n$-objects with large smallest components. We show how the coefficients of the Taylor expansion of $Ω_{K}(x)$ for $\lfloor x\rfloor \leq x < \lfloor x\rfloor+1$ depends on those for $\lfloor x\rfloor-1 \leq x-1 < \lfloor x\rfloor$. We use this family of coefficients to evaluate $Ω_{K}(x)$.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。