Laver Table
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, Laver tables (named after Richard Laver, who discovered them towards the end of the 1980s in connection with his works on set theory) are tables of numbers that have certain properties of algebraic and combinatorial interest. They occur in the study of racks and quandles.


Definition

For any nonnegative integer ''n'', the ''n''-th ''Laver table'' is the 2''n'' × 2''n'' table whose entry in the cell at row ''p'' and column ''q'' (1 ≤ ''p'',''q'' ≤ 2''n'') is defined as :L_n(p, q) := p \star_n q where \star_n is the unique binary operation that satisfies the following two equations for all ''p'', ''q'' in : and Note: Equation () uses the notation x \bmod 2^n to mean the unique member of congruent to ''x''
modulo In computing, the modulo operation returns the remainder or signed remainder of a division, after one number is divided by another (called the '' modulus'' of the operation). Given two positive numbers and , modulo (often abbreviated as ) is t ...
2''n''. Equation () is known as the ''(left) self-distributive law'', and a set endowed with ''any'' binary operation satisfying this law is called a
shelf Shelf ( : shelves) may refer to: * Shelf (storage), a flat horizontal surface used for display and storage Geology * Continental shelf, the extended perimeter of a continent, usually covered by shallow seas * Ice shelf, a thick platform of ice f ...
. Thus, the ''n''-th Laver table is just the multiplication table for the unique shelf (, \star_n) that satisfies Equation (). Examples: Following are the first five Laver tables, i.e. the multiplication tables for the shelves (, \star_n), ''n'' = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4:
There is no known closed-form expression to calculate the entries of a Laver table directly, but Patrick Dehornoy provides a simple algorithm for filling out Laver tables.Dehornoy, Patrick
Laver Tables
(starting on slide 26). Retrieved 2018-12-11.


Properties

# For all ''p'', ''q'' in : \ \ 2^n \star_n q = q;\ \ p \star_n 2^n = 2^n;\ \ (2^n-1)\star_n q = 2^n;\ \ p\star_n 2^=2^n\textp\ne 2^n. # For all ''p'' in : \ \ (p \star_n q)_ is periodic with period πn(p) equal to a power of two. # For all ''p'' in : \ \ (p \star_n q)_ is strictly increasing from p \star_n 1 = p+1\ to \ p \star_n \pi_n(p) = 2^n. # For all ''p'',''q'': \ p \star_n q = (p+1)^, \text x^=x,\ x^=x^ \star_n x.


Are the first-row periods unbounded?

Looking at just the first row in the ''n''-th Laver table, for ''n'' = 0, 1, 2, ..., the entries in each first row are seen to be periodic with a period that's always a power of two, as mentioned in Property 2 above. The first few periods are 1, 1, 2, 4, 4, 8, 8, 8, 8, 16, 16, ... . This sequence is nondecreasing, and in 1995 Richard Laver proved, ''under the assumption that there exists a
rank-into-rank In set theory, a branch of mathematics, a rank-into-rank embedding is a large cardinal property defined by one of the following four axioms given in order of increasing consistency strength. (A set of rank < λ is one of the elements of the set V< ...
(a
large cardinal In the mathematical field of set theory, a large cardinal property is a certain kind of property of transfinite cardinal numbers. Cardinals with such properties are, as the name suggests, generally very "large" (for example, bigger than the least Î ...
property)'', that it actually increases without bound. (It is not known whether this is also provable in ZFC without the additional large-cardinal axiom.) In any case, it grows extremely slowly; Randall Dougherty showed that 32 cannot appear in this sequence (if it ever does) until ''n'' > A(9, A(8, A(8, 254))), where A denotes the Ackermann–Péter function..


References


Further reading

* . * . * Shelves and the infinite: https://johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com/2016/05/06/shelves-and-the-infinite/ {{DEFAULTSORT:Laver Table Mathematical logic Combinatorics