A Note on the Maximum Number of k-Powers in a Finite Word
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Published:2024-08-09
Issue:3
Volume:31
Page:
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ISSN:1077-8926
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Container-title:The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics
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language:
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Short-container-title:Electron. J. Combin.
Author:
Li Shuo,Pachocki Jakub,Radoszewski Jakub
Abstract
A power is a concatenation of $k$ copies of a word $u$, for a positive integer $k$; the power is also called a $k$-power and $k$ is its exponent. We prove that for any $k \ge 2$, the maximum number of different non-empty $k$-power factors in a word of length $n$ is between $\frac{n}{k-1}-\Theta(\sqrt{n})$ and $\frac{n-1}{k-1}$. We also show that the maximum number of different non-empty power factors of exponent at least 2 in a length-$n$ word is at most $n-1$. Both upper bounds generalize the recent upper bound of $n-1$ on the maximum number of different square factors in a length-$n$ word by Brlek and Li (2022).
Publisher
The Electronic Journal of Combinatorics