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What loops are possible when doing this function to the rationals?

Mathematics Asked by user808945 on November 2, 2021

What loops are possible when doing this function to the rationals?

Let’s define this function on a simplified fraction $frac{a}{b}$.

$$fleft(frac{a}{b}right)=frac{a+b}{b+1}$$

I started this with $f(frac{2}{3})=frac{5}{4}$ then i did the function again and got this sequence of numbers $frac{2}{3},frac{5}{4},frac{9}{5},frac{7}{3},frac{5}{2},frac{7}{3},dots$ I saw that is starts to loop with $frac{7}{3},frac{5}{2}$

Another loop is $frac{1}{1}$, a one cycle.

Another loop I found was $frac{2}{1},frac{3}{2},frac{5}{3}$.

My first question is: from starting from any rational number does it all ways end in a loop or does it ever go to infinity? And my second question is: what sizes of loops are possible?

If the three loops I stated are the only loops prove it

Dark made a post related What are the possible loops when doing this a type of function to the rationals?

2 Answers

Here is a modification of @Steven Stadnicki's proof. The novel contribution of this answer is justifying the reduction step in Steven's solution through the use of a suitable partial order on the set of lattice points.

Step 1. Settings and Useful Observations

Let $mathbb{N}_1 = {1, 2, 3, dots}$ denote the set of positive integers and define $mathsf{Red} : mathbb{N}_1^2 to mathbb{N}_1^2$ by

$$ mathsf{Red}(a, b) = frac{(a,b)}{gcd(a,b)}. $$

Also, we equip $mathbb{N}_1^2$ with the partial order $leq$ such that1)

$$ (a, b) leq (c, d) quad Leftrightarrow quad [b < d]text{ or }[b = d text{ and } a leq c]. $$

The following observations are easy to prove but will be useful throughout.

  • $text{(P1)} $ $a leq c$ and $b leq d$ implies $(a, b) leq (c, d)$.

  • $text{(P2)} $ $mathsf{Red}(mathrm{p}) leq mathrm{p}$ for any $mathrm{p} in mathbb{N}_1^2$.

Step 2. Key Observation

We will identify each pair $(a,b) in mathbb{N}_1^2$ satisfying $gcd(a, b) = 1$ with the simplified fraction $a/b$. Under this identification, we have

$$f(a/b) = mathsf{Red}(a+b,b+1). $$

Now we will investigate the effect of a suitable number of iterations of $f$. By noting that either $a$ or $b$ must be odd, the following three cases exhaust all the possibilities:

  • Case 1. Suppose that both $a$ and $b$ are odd. Then both $a+b$ and $b+1$ are even, and so,

    begin{align*} f(a,b) = mathsf{Red}(a+b, b+1) = mathsf{Red}(tfrac{a+b}{2}, tfrac{b+1}{2}) stackrel{text{(P2)}}leq (tfrac{a+b}{2}, tfrac{b+1}{2}). tag{1} end{align*}

  • Case 2. Suppose that $a$ is odd and $b$ is even. Then by writing $d=gcd(a+b,b+1)$,

    begin{align*} f^{circ 2}(a,b) = f(tfrac{a+b}{d},tfrac{b+1}{d}) = mathsf{Red}(tfrac{a+2b+1}{d},tfrac{b+d+1}{d}). end{align*}

    Since $d$ is odd, both $a+2b+1$ and $b+d+1$ are even. This means that both are divisible by $2d$, and so,

    begin{align*} f^{circ 2}(a,b) = mathsf{Red}(tfrac{a+2b+1}{2d},tfrac{b+d+1}{2d}) stackrel{text{(P2)}}leq (tfrac{a+2b+1}{2d},tfrac{b+d+1}{2d}) stackrel{text{(P1)}}leq (tfrac{a+2b+1}{2},tfrac{b+2}{2}). tag{2} end{align*}

    Here, the last inequality follows from the general fact that $frac{A+Bd}{d}leq A+B$ for all $A, B geq 0$ and $d geq 1$.

  • Case 3. Suppose that $a$ is even and $b$ is odd. Since $d = gcd(a+b, b+1)$ is odd, we find that $frac{a+b}{d}$ is odd and $frac{b+1}{d}$ is even. So by applying $text{(2)}$ and using the inequality in the previous step,

    begin{align*} f^{circ 3}(a,b) = f^{circ 2}(tfrac{a+b}{d},tfrac{b+1}{d}) stackrel{text{(2)}}leq (tfrac{a+3b+d+2}{2d},tfrac{b+2d+1}{2d}) stackrel{text{(P1)}}leq (tfrac{a+3b+3}{2},tfrac{b+3}{2}). tag{3} end{align*}

Step 3. Proof

Let $(a, b) in mathbb{N}_1$ satisfy $gcd(a, b) = 1$. Then by $text{(1)}$$text{(3)}$, we observe the following:

  1. If $b > 3$, then $frac{b+3}{2} < b$, and so, a suitable number of iterations by $f$ reduces the second coordinate. This can be repeated finitely many times until the second coordinate becomes $leq 3$.

  2. If $b leq 3$ and $a > 12$, then $frac{a+3b+3}{2} < a$, and so, a suitable number of iterations by $f$ reduces the first coordinate. Similarly as before, this can be repeated finitely many times until the first coordinate becomes $leq 12$.

  3. If $a leq 12$ and $b leq 3$, then a suitable number of iterations by $f$ will map $(a, b)$ into another point $(a', b')$ with $a' leq 12$ and $b' leq 3$. So by the pigeonhole principle, iteration by $f$ will eventually fall into a cycle.

  4. By checking all the possible $12+6+8=26$ cases manually, we find that there are only three types of cycles: $$ (1, 1) qquad (5, 2), (7, 4) qquad (2, 1), (3, 2), (5, 3) $$

This completes the proof.


1) Note that this is exactly the colexicographical order induced by the usual order on $mathbb{N}_1$.

Answered by Sangchul Lee on November 2, 2021

The key here is that for parity reasons, we'll always get to a 'smaller' fraction in a short, finite number of stages. Rather than fractions, I'll refer to an iteration on a pair of numbers $f:langle a,brangle mapsto mathop{Red}(langle a+b,b+1rangle)$ where $mathop{Red}()$ denotes reduction $mathop{Red}(langle a,brangle) = langlefrac{a}{gcd(a,b)},frac{b}{gcd(a,b)}rangle $. We'll start by inducting on the value of $b$, to show that we need to only consider a small number of values of $b$ when looking for cycles. Note that $a$ and $b$ can't both be even, so there are three cases: $a=2m+1, b=2n$, $a=2m, b=2n+1$, and $a=2m+1, b=2n+1$. The third case immediately goes to $langle a',b'rangle$ $=mathop{Red}(langle 2m+2n+2,2n+2rangle)$ $=mathop{Red}(langle m+n+1,n+1rangle)$; this might reduce even further, but this is good enough for our purposes. note that $b'=n+1lt b=2n+1$, so the value of $b$ always reduces in this case unless $b=1$.

In the case $a=2m+1, b=2n$, the map goes $langle 2m+1, 2nrangle$ $mapsto mathop{Red}(langle 2m+2n+1, 2n+1rangle)$ $mapstomathop{Red}(langle 2m+4n+2, 2n+2rangle)$ $=mathop{Red}(langle m+2n+1, n+1rangle)$. Here we have $b'=n+1lt b=2n$ as long as $bgt 2$.

Finally, in the case $a=2m, b=2n+1$, the map goes $langle 2m, 2n+1rangle mapstomathop{Red}(langle 2m+2n+1, 2n+2rangle)$ $mapstomathop{Red}(langle 2m+4n+3, 2n+3rangle)$ $mapstomathop{Red}(langle 2m+6n+6, 2n+4rangle) = mathop{Red}(langle m+3n+3, n+2rangle)$. Here, $b'=n+2lt b=2n+1$ as long as $bgt 3$.

Together, these mean that we can study the effects of the iteration specifically on the cases $langle a,brangle: bin {1,2,3}$; any larger $b$ will eventually reduce to a $b$ in this range. More specifically, we have the cases $langle a, 1rangle$, $langle 2m+1, 2rangle$, and $langle 2m, 3rangle$ to study. I'm going to use a different form of induction on these cases, based on the value of $a+b$.

Let's start with the case $langle a,1rangle$. If $a$ is odd, then we have $langle 2m+1, 1rangle mapsto langle m+1, 1rangle$; here $a'+b'=m+2$ will always be less than $a+b=2m+2$. If $a$ is even, then we have the case $langle 2m, 1rangle$; by the logic above, this maps to $mathop{Red}(langle m+3, 3rangle)$. We get a smaller value for the sum as long as $a+b=2m+1gt a'+b'=m+6$, or in other words as long as $mgt 5$ (i.e., $agt 10$).

Next up, we have the case $langle 2m+1, 2rangle$; by the logic above, this maps to $mathop{Red}(langle m+3, 2rangle)$. Since $a'+b'=m+5lt a+b=2m+3$ as long as $mgt 2$, we can see that any pair $langle a,2rangle$ with $a$ an odd number greater than $5$ will yield new pair with a smaller sum.

Finally, we have the case $langle 2m, 3rangle$; once again, using the logic above we see that this will map to $mathop{Red}(langle m+6, 3rangle)$. Here we have $a+b=2m+3gt a'+b'=m+9$ as long as $mgt 6$, or in other words $agt 12$.

Putting this all together, we can see that cases of the form $langle a,brangle$ with $bleq 3$ always yield another case of similar form with smaller $a$ as long as $agt 12$; this leaves only a finite number of values to check, which yields the loops that have already been found.

Answered by Steven Stadnicki on November 2, 2021

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