Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science, Vol 5 (2002)

Font Size:  Small  Medium  Large
DMTCS vol 5 no 1 (2002), pp. 47-54

Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science

DMTCS

Volume 5 n° 1 (2002), pp. 47-54


author:Kenneth G. Monks
title:3x+1 Minus the +
keywords:Collatz Conjecture, 3x+1 problem, Fractran, discrete dynamical systems
abstract:We use Conway's Fractran language to derive a function R:Z+Z+ of the form R(n) = rin  if  n ≡ i &mod; d where d is a positive integer, 0 ≤ i < d and r0,r1, ... rd-1 are rational numbers, such that the famous 3x+1 conjecture holds if and only if the R-orbit of 2n contains 2 for all positive integers n. We then show that the R-orbit of an arbitrary positive integer is a constant multiple of an orbit that contains a power of 2. Finally we apply our main result to show that any cycle { x0, ... ,xm-1 } of positive integers for the 3x+1 function must satisfy
i∈ E ⌊ xi/2 ⌋ = ∑i∈ O ⌊ xi/2 ⌋ +k.
where O={ i : xi  is odd } , E={ i : xi  is even } , and k=|O|.
The method used illustrates a general mechanism for deriving mathematical results about the iterative dynamics of arbitrary integer functions from Fractran algorithms.

If your browser does not display the abstract correctly (because of the different mathematical symbols) you can look it up in the PostScript or PDF files.

reference: Kenneth G. Monks (2002), 3x+1 Minus the +, Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science 5, pp. 47-54
bibtex:For a corresponding BibTeX entry, please consider our BibTeX-file.
ps.gz-source:dm050103.ps.gz (0 K)
ps-source:dm050103.ps (93 K)
pdf-source:dm050103.pdf (94 K)

The first source gives you the `gzipped' PostScript, the second the plain PostScript and the third the format for the Adobe accrobat reader. Depending on the installation of your web browser, at least one of these should (after some amount of time) pop up a window for you that shows the full article. If this is not the case, you should contact your system administrator to install your browser correctly.

Due to limitations of your local software, the two formats may show up differently on your screen. If eg you use xpdf to visualize pdf, some of the graphics in the file may not come across. On the other hand, pdf has a capacity of giving links to sections, bibliography and external references that will not appear with PostScript.


Automatically produced on Sat Jun 19 20:43:50 CEST 2004 by gustedt