Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4649573 Discrete Mathematics 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

People arrive one at a time to a theater consisting of mm rows of length nn. Being unfriendly they choose seats at random so that no one is in front of them, behind them or to either side. What is the expected number of people in the theater when it becomes full, i.e., it cannot accommodate any more unfriendly people? This is equivalent to the random process of generating a maximal independent set of an m×nm×n grid by randomly choosing a node, removing it and its neighbors, and repeating until there are no nodes remaining. The case of m=1m=1 was posed by Freedman and Shepp [D. Freedman, L. Shepp, An unfriendly seating arrangement (problem 62-3), SIAM Rev. 4 (2) (1962) 150] and solved independently by Friedman, Rothman and MacKenzie [H.D. Friedman, D. Rothman, Solution to: An unfriendly seating arrangement (problem 62-3), SIAM Rev. 6 (2) (1964) 180–182; J.K. MacKenzie, Sequential filling of a line by intervals placed at random and its application to linear adsorption, J. Chem. Phys. 37 (4) (1962) 723–728] by proving the asymptotic limit 12−12e2. In this paper we solve the case m=2m=2 and prove the asymptotic limit 12−14e. In addition, we consider the more general case of m×nm×n grids, m≥1m≥1, and prove the existence of asymptotic limits in this general setting. We also make several conjectures based upon Monte Carlo simulations.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics
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