Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6876127 | Theoretical Computer Science | 2014 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
When pâ¥5, Wang's conjecture is known to be wrong. When p=2, the conjecture is true. This study proves that when p=3, the conjecture is also true. If P(B)â â
, then B has a subset Bâ² of minimal cycle generators such that P(Bâ²)â â
and P(Bâ³)=â
for Bâ³â«Bâ². This study demonstrates that the set C(3) of all minimal cycle generators contains 787,605 members that can be classified into 2,906 equivalence classes. N(3) is the set of all maximal non-cycle generators: if BâN(3), then P(B)=â
and P(BË)â â
for BËâ«B. Wang's conjecture is shown to be true by proving that BâN(3) implies Σ(B)=â
.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Computational Theory and Mathematics
Authors
Hung-Hsun Chen, Wen-Guei Hu, De-Jan Lai, Song-Sun Lin,