Plane partition
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In
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 ...
and especially in
combinatorics Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and an end in obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many a ...
, a plane partition is a two-dimensional array of nonnegative integers \pi_ (with positive
integer An integer is the number zero (), a positive natural number (, , , etc.) or a negative integer with a minus sign ( −1, −2, −3, etc.). The negative numbers are the additive inverses of the corresponding positive numbers. In the languag ...
indices ''i'' and ''j'') that is nonincreasing in both indices. This means that : \pi_ \ge \pi_ and \pi_ \ge \pi_ for all ''i'' and ''j''. Moreover, only finitely many of the \pi_ may be nonzero. Plane partitions are a generalization of partitions of an integer. A plane partition may be represented visually by the placement of a stack of \pi_ unit cubes above the point (''i'', ''j'') in the plane, giving a three-dimensional solid as shown in the picture. The image has matrix form : \begin 4 & 4 & 3 & 2 & 1\\ 4 & 3 & 1 & 1\\ 3 & 2 & 1\\ 1 \end Plane partitions are also often described by the positions of the unit cubes. From this point of view, a plane partition can be defined as a finite subset \mathcal of positive integer lattice points (''i'', ''j'', ''k'') in \mathbb^3, such that if (''r'', ''s'', ''t'') lies in \mathcal and if (i, j, k) satisfies 1\leq i\leq r, 1\leq j\leq s, and 1\leq k\leq t, then (''i'', ''j'', ''k'') also lies in \mathcal. The ''sum'' of a plane partition is : n=\sum_ \pi_ . The sum describes the number of cubes of which the plane partition consists. Much interest in plane partitions concerns the enumeration of plane partitions in various classes. The number of plane partitions with sum ''n'' is denoted by PL(''n''). For example, there are six plane partitions with sum 3 : \begin 3 \end \qquad \begin 2 & 1 \end \qquad \begin 1 & 1 & 1 \end \qquad \begin 2 \\ 1 \end \qquad \begin 1 & 1 \\ 1 \end \qquad \begin 1 \\ 1 \\ 1 \end so PL(3) = 6. Plane partitions may be classified by how symmetric they are. Many symmetric classes of plane partitions are enumerated by simple product formulas.


Generating function of plane partitions

The
generating function In mathematics, a generating function is a way of encoding an infinite sequence of numbers () by treating them as the coefficients of a formal power series. This series is called the generating function of the sequence. Unlike an ordinary serie ...
for PL(''n'') is : \sum_^\infty \operatorname(n) x^n = \prod_^\infty \frac = 1+x+3x^2+6x^3+13x^4+24x^5+\cdots\qquad. It is sometimes referred to as the ''MacMahon function'', as it was discovered by Percy A. MacMahon. This formula may be viewed as the 2-dimensional analogue of
Euler Leonhard Euler ( , ; 15 April 170718 September 1783) was a Swiss mathematician, physicist, astronomer, geographer, logician and engineer who founded the studies of graph theory and topology and made pioneering and influential discoveries in ...
's product formula for the number of integer partitions of ''n''. There is no analogous formula known for partitions in higher dimensions (i.e., for solid partitions). The asymptotics for plane partitions were first calculated by E. M. Wright. One obtains, for large n , that : \operatorname(n)\sim \frac\ \left(\frac\right)^ \ \exp\left(3\ \zeta(3)^ \left(\frac2\right)^+ \zeta'(-1)\right) . Evaluating numerically yields : \ln \operatorname(n) \sim 2.00945n^ -0.69444 \ln n -1.4631.


Plane partitions in a box

Around 1896, MacMahon set up the generating function of plane partitions that are subsets of the r \times s \times t box \mathcal(r,s,t)=\ in his first paper on plane partitions. The formula is given by \sum_q^=\prod_^r\prod_^s\frac A proof of this formula can be found in the book ''Combinatory Analysis'' written by MacMahon. MacMahon also mentions the generating functions of plane partitions. The formula for the generating function can be written in an alternative way, which is given by \sum_q^=\prod_^r\prod_^s\prod_^t\frac Multiplying each component by \textstyle\frac, and setting ''q'' = 1 in the formulas above yields that the total number N_1(r, s, t) of plane partitions that fit in the r \times s \times t box \mathcal(r,s,t) is equal to the following product formula: N_1(r,s,t)=\prod_\frac=\prod_^\prod_^\frac. The planar case (when ''t'' = 1) yields the
binomial coefficient In mathematics, the binomial coefficients are the positive integers that occur as coefficients in the binomial theorem. Commonly, a binomial coefficient is indexed by a pair of integers and is written \tbinom. It is the coefficient of the t ...
s: : \mathcal(r,s,1) = \binom. The general solution is :\begin \mathcal(r,s,t) &= \prod_^t \frac \\&= \prod_^t \frac \end


Special plane partitions

Special plane partitions include symmetric, cyclic and self-complementary plane partitions, and combinations of these properties. In the subsequent sections, the enumeration of special sub-classes of plane partitions inside a box are considered. These articles use the notation N_i(r,s,t) for the number of such plane partitions, where , , and are the dimensions of the box under consideration, and is the index for the case being considered.


Action of ''S''2, ''S''3 and ''C''3 on plane partitions

\mathcal_2 is the group of
permutations In mathematics, a permutation of a set is, loosely speaking, an arrangement of its members into a sequence or linear order, or if the set is already ordered, a rearrangement of its elements. The word "permutation" also refers to the act or p ...
acting on the first two coordinates of a point. This group contains the identity, which sends (''i'', ''j'', ''k'') to itself, and the transposition (''i'', ''j'', ''k'') → (''j'', ''i'', ''k''). The number of elements in an orbit \eta is denoted by , \eta, . \mathcal/\mathcal_2 denotes the set of orbits of elements of \mathcal under the action of \mathcal_2. The height of an element (''i'', ''j'', ''k'') is defined by ht(i,j,k)=i+j+k-2. The height increases by one for each step away from the back right corner. For example, the corner position (1, 1, 1) has height 1 and ''ht''(2, 1, 1) = 2. The height of an orbit is defined to be the height of any element in the orbit. This notation of the height differs from the notation of
Ian G. Macdonald Ian Grant Macdonald (born 11 October 1928 in London, England) is a British mathematician known for his contributions to symmetric functions, special functions, Lie algebra theory and other aspects of algebra, algebraic combinatorics, and combi ...
. There is a natural action of the permutation group \mathcal_3 on a Ferrers diagram of a plane partition—this corresponds to simultaneously permuting the three coordinates of all nodes. This generalizes the conjugation operation for
integer partition In number theory and combinatorics, a partition of a positive integer , also called an integer partition, is a way of writing as a sum of positive integers. Two sums that differ only in the order of their summands are considered the same part ...
s. The action of \mathcal_3 can generate new plane partitions starting from a given plane partition. Below there are shown six plane partitions of 4 that are generated by the \mathcal_3 action. Only the exchange of the first two coordinates is manifest in the representation given below. : \begin 3 & 1 \end \quad \begin 3 \\ 1 \end \quad \begin 2 & 1 & 1\end \quad \begin 2 \\ 1 \\ 1 \end \quad \begin 1 & 1 & 1 \\ 1 \end \quad \begin 1 & 1 \\ 1 \\ 1 \end \mathcal_3 is called the group of cyclic permutations and consists of : (i,j,k)\rightarrow(i,j,k), \quad (i,j,k)\rightarrow(j,k,i), \quad \text\quad (i,j,k)\rightarrow(k,i,j).


Symmetric plane partitions

A plane partition \pi is called symmetric if ''i'',''j'' = ''j,i'' for all ''i'', ''j''. In other words, a plane partition is symmetric if (i, j, k)\in \mathcal(r,s,t) if and only if (j, i, k) \in\mathcal(r,s,t). Plane partitions of this type are symmetric with respect to the plane ''x'' = ''y''. Below is an example of a symmetric plane partition and its visualisation. : \begin 4 &3 &3 &2 &1\\ 3 &3 &2 &1 &\\ 3 &2 &2 &1 &\\ 2 &1 &1 & & \\ 1 & & & & \end In 1898, MacMahon formulated his conjecture about the generating function for symmetric plane partitions which are subsets of \mathcal(r,r,t). This conjecture is called The MacMahon conjecture. The generating function is given by \sum_q^=\prod_^r\left frac\prod_^r\frac\right/math> Macdonald pointed out that Percy A. MacMahon's conjecture reduces to : \sum_q^=\prod_\frac In 1972 Edward A. Bender and Donald E. Knuth conjectured a simple closed form for the generating function for plane partition which have at most ''r'' rows and strict decrease along the rows. George Andrews showed that the conjecture of Bender and Knuth and the MacMahon conjecture are equivalent. MacMahon's conjecture was proven almost simultaneously by George Andrews in 1977 and later Ian G. Macdonald presented an alternative proof. When setting ''q'' = 1 yields the counting function N_2(r,r,t) which is given by : N_2(r,r,t)=\prod_^\frac\prod_\frac For a proof of the case ''q'' = 1 please refer to George Andrews' paper ''MacMahon's conjecture on symmetric plane partitions''.


Cyclically symmetric plane partitions

is called cyclically symmetric, if the ''i''-th row of \pi is conjugate to the ''i''-th column for all ''i''. The ''i''-th row is regarded as an ordinary partition. The conjugate of a partition \pi is the partition whose diagram is the transpose of partition \pi. In other words, the plane partition is cyclically symmetric if whenever (i,j,k)\in\mathcal(r,s,t) then (''k'', ''i'', ''j'') and (''j'', ''k'', ''i'') also belong to \mathcal(r,s,t). Below an example of a cyclically symmetric plane partition and its visualization is given. : \begin 6 &5 &5 &4 &3 &3\\ 6 &4 &3 &3 &1 &\\ 6 &4 &3 &1 &1 &\\ 4 &2 &2 &1 & &\\ 3 &1 &1 & & &\\ 1 &1 &1 & & & \end Macdonald's conjecture provides a formula for calculating the number of cyclically symmetric plane partitions for a given integer ''r''. This conjecture is called The Macdonald conjecture. The generating function for cyclically symmetric plane partitions which are subsets of \mathcal(r,r,r) is given by : \sum_q^=\prod_\frac This equation can also be written in another way : \prod_\frac=\prod_^r\left frac\prod_^r\frac\right In 1979, Andrews proved Macdonald's conjecture for the case ''q'' = 1 as the "weak" Macdonald conjecture. Three years later William. H. Mills, David Robbins and Howard Rumsey proved the general case of Macdonald's conjecture in their paper ''Proof of the Macdonald conjecture''. The formula for N_3(r,r,r) is given by the "weak" Macdonald conjecture : N_3(r,r,r)=\prod_^\left frac\prod_^r\frac\right


Totally symmetric plane partitions

A totally symmetric plane partition \pi is a plane partition which is symmetric and cyclically symmetric. This means that the diagram is symmetric at all three diagonal planes, or in other words that if (i, j, k)\in\mathcal(r,s,t) then all six permutations of (''i'', ''j'', ''k'') are also in \mathcal(r,s,t). Below an example of a matrix for a totally symmetric plane partition is given. The picture shows the visualisation of the matrix. : \begin 5 &4 &4 &3 &1\\ 4 &3 &3 &1 &\\ 4 &3 &2 &1 &\\ 3 &1 &1 & & \\ 1 & & && \end Macdonald found the total number of totally symmetric plane partitions that are subsets of \mathcal(r,r,r). The formula is given by : N_4(r,r,r)=\prod_\frac In 1995 John R. Stembridge first proved the formula for N_4(r,r,r) and later in 2005 it was proven by George Andrews, Peter Paule, and Carsten Schneider. Around 1983 Andrews and Robbins independently stated an explicit product formula for the orbit-counting generating function for totally symmetric plane partitions. This formula already alluded to in George E. Andrews' paper ''Totally symmetric plane partitions'' which was published 1980. The conjecture is called The ''q''-TSPP conjecture and it is given by: Let \mathcal_3 be the symmetric group. The orbit counting function for totally symmetric plane partitions that fit inside \mathcal(r,r,r) is given by the formula : \sum_q^=\prod_\frac = \prod_ \frac. This conjecture was proved in 2011 by Christoph Koutschan, Manuel Kauers and Doron Zeilberger.


Self-complementary plane partitions

If \pi_+\pi_=t for all 1\leq i \leq r, 1\leq j \leq s, then the plane partition is called self-complementary. It is necessary that the product r\cdot s\cdot t is even. Below an example of a self-complementary symmetric plane partition and its visualisation is given. : \begin 4 &4 &3 &2 &1\\ 4 &2 &2 &2 &\\ 3 &2 &1 & & \end Richard P. Stanley conjectured formulas for the total number of self-complementary plane partitions N_5(r,s,t). According to Stanley, Robbins also formulated formulas for the total number of self-complementary plane partitions in a different but equivalent form. The total number of self-complementary plane partitions that are subsets of \mathcal(r,s,t) is given by : N_5(2r,2s,2t)=N_1(r,s,t)^2 : N_5(2r+1,2s,2t)=N_1(r,s,t)N_1(r+1,s,t) : N_5(2r+1,2s+1,2t)=N_1(r+1,s,t)N_1(r,s+1,t) It is necessary that the product of ''r,s'' and ''t'' is even. A proof can be found in the paper ''Symmetries of Plane Partitions'' which was written by Stanley. The proof works with Schur functions s_(x). Stanley's proof of the ordinary enumeration of self-complementary plane partitions yields the ''q''-analogue by substituting x_i=q^i for i=1,\ldots,n. This is a special case of Stanley's hook-content formula. The generating function for self-complementary plane partitions is given by : s_(q,q^2,\ldots,q^n)=q^\prod_^\alpha \prod_^\frac Substituting this formula in : s_(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_)^2 \ \text \mathcal(2r,2s,2t) : s_(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_) s_(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_) \text \mathcal(2r,2s+1,2t) : s_(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_) s_(x_1,x_2,\ldots,x_) \text \mathcal(2r+1,2s,2t+1) supplies the desired ''q''-analogue case.


Cyclically symmetric self-complementary plane partitions

A plane partition \pi is called cyclically symmetric self-complementary if it is cyclically symmetric and self-complementary. The figure presents a cyclically symmetric self-complementary plane partition and the according matrix is below. : \begin 4 &4 &4 &1\\ 3 &3 &2 &1\\ 3 &2 &1 &1\\ 3 & & & \end In a private communication with Stanley, Robbins conjectured that the total number of cyclically symmetric self-complementary plane partitions is given by N_6(2r,2r,2r). The total number of cyclically symmetric self-complementary plane partitions is given by : N_6(2r,2r,2r)=D_r^2 D_r is the number of r\times r alternating sign matrices. A formula for D_r is given by : D_r=\prod_^\frac Greg Kuperberg proved the formula for N_6(r,r,r) in 1994.


Totally symmetric self-complementary plane partitions

A totally symmetric self-complementary plane partition is a plane partition that is both totally symmetric and self-complementary. For instance, the matrix below is such a plane partition; it is visualised in the accompanying picture. : \begin 6 &6 &6 &5 &5 &3\\ 6 &5 &5 &3 &3 &1\\ 6 &5 &5 &3 &3 &1\\ 5 &3 &3 &1 &1 & \\ 5 &3 &3 &1 &1 & \\ 3 &1 &1 & & & \end The formula N_7(r,r,r) was conjectured by William H. Mills, Robbins and Howard Rumsey in their work ''Self-Complementary Totally Symmetric Plane Partitions''. The total number of totally symmetric self-complementary plane partitions is given by : N_7(2r,2r,2r)=D_r Andrews proves this formula in 1994 in his paper ''Plane Partitions V: The TSSCPP Conjecture''.


See also

* Gaussian binomial coefficients * Voxel


References

* G. Andrews, ''The Theory of Partitions'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1998, * * I.G. Macdonald, ''Symmetric Functions and Hall Polynomials'', Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999, * P.A. MacMahon,
Combinatory analysis
', 2 vols, Cambridge University Press, 1915–16.


External links

*{{MathWorld, title=Plane partition, urlname=PlanePartition
The DLMF page on Plane Partitions
Enumerative combinatorics Integer partitions