250px, thumbnail, The is a Steiner triple system S(2,3,7). The blocks are the 7 lines, each containing 3 points. Every pair of points belongs to a unique line.">Fano plane is a Steiner triple system S(2,3,7). The blocks are the 7 lines, each containing 3 points. Every pair of points belongs to a unique line.
In
combinatorial mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, a Steiner system (named after
Jakob Steiner) is a type of
block design, specifically a
t-design with λ = 1 and ''t'' = 2 or (recently) ''t'' ≥ 2.
A Steiner system with parameters ''t'', ''k'', ''n'', written S(''t'',''k'',''n''), is an ''n''-element
set ''S'' together with a set of ''k''-element
subset
In mathematics, a Set (mathematics), set ''A'' is a subset of a set ''B'' if all Element (mathematics), elements of ''A'' are also elements of ''B''; ''B'' is then a superset of ''A''. It is possible for ''A'' and ''B'' to be equal; if they a ...
s of ''S'' (called blocks) with the property that each ''t''-element subset of ''S'' is contained in exactly one block. In an alternative notation for block designs, an S(''t'',''k'',''n'') would be a ''t''-(''n'',''k'',1) design.
This definition is relatively new. The classical definition of Steiner systems also required that ''k'' = ''t'' + 1. An S(2,3,''n'') was (and still is) called a ''Steiner triple'' (or ''triad'') ''system'', while an S(3,4,''n'') is called a ''Steiner quadruple system'', and so on. With the generalization of the definition, this naming system is no longer strictly adhered to.
Long-standing problems in
design theory were whether there exist any nontrivial Steiner systems (nontrivial meaning ''t'' < ''k'' < ''n'') with ''t'' ≥ 6; also whether infinitely many have ''t'' = 4 or 5. Both existences were proved by
Peter Keevash in 2014. His proof is
non-constructive and, as of 2019, no actual Steiner systems are known for large values of ''t''.
Types of Steiner systems
A finite
projective plane of order , with the lines as blocks, is an , since it has points, each line passes through points, and each pair of distinct points lies on exactly one line.
A finite
affine plane of order , with the lines as blocks, is an . An affine plane of order can be obtained from a projective plane of the same order by removing one block and all of the points in that block from the projective plane. Choosing different blocks to remove in this way can lead to non-isomorphic affine planes.
An S(3,4,''n'') is called a Steiner quadruple system. A necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of an S(3,4,''n'') is that ''n''
2 or 4 (mod 6). The abbreviation SQS(''n'') is often used for these systems. Up to isomorphism, SQS(8) and SQS(10) are unique, there are 4 SQS(14)s and 1,054,163 SQS(16)s.
An S(4,5,''n'') is called a Steiner quintuple system. A necessary condition for the existence of such a system is that ''n''
3 or 5 (mod 6) which comes from considerations that apply to all the classical Steiner systems. An additional necessary condition is that ''n''
4 (mod 5), which comes from the fact that the number of blocks must be an integer. Sufficient conditions are not known. There is a unique Steiner quintuple system of order 11, but none of order 15 or order 17. Systems are known for orders 23, 35, 47, 71, 83, 107, 131, 167 and 243. The smallest order for which the existence is not known (as of 2011) is 21.
Steiner triple systems
An S(2,3,''n'') is called a Steiner triple system, and its blocks are called triples. It is common to see the abbreviation STS(''n'') for a Steiner triple system of order ''n''. The total number of pairs is ''n(n-1)/2'', of which three appear in a triple, and so the total number of triples is ''n''(''n''−1)/6. This shows that ''n'' must be of the form ''6k+1'' or ''6k + 3'' for some ''k''. The fact that this condition on ''n'' is sufficient for the existence of an S(2,3,''n'') was proved by
Raj Chandra Bose and T. Skolem. The projective plane of order 2 (the
Fano plane) is an STS(7) and the
affine plane of order 3 is an STS(9). Up to isomorphism, the STS(7) and STS(9) are unique, there are two STS(13)s, 80 STS(15)s, and 11,084,874,829 STS(19)s.
We can define a multiplication on the set ''S'' using the Steiner triple system by setting ''aa'' = ''a'' for all ''a'' in ''S'', and ''ab'' = ''c'' if is a triple. This makes ''S'' an
idempotent,
commutative
In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result. It is a fundamental property of many binary operations, and many mathematical proofs depend on it. Perhaps most familiar as a pr ...
quasigroup. It has the additional property that ''ab'' = ''c'' implies ''bc'' = ''a'' and ''ca'' = ''b''. Conversely, any (finite) quasigroup with these properties arises from a Steiner triple system. Commutative idempotent quasigroups satisfying this additional property are called ''Steiner quasigroups''.
Resolvable Steiner systems
Some of the S(2,3,n) systems can have their triples partitioned into (n-1)/2 sets each having (n/3) pairwise disjoint triples. This is called ''resolvable'' and such systems are called ''Kirkman triple systems'' after
Thomas Kirkman, who studied such resolvable systems before Steiner. Dale Mesner, Earl Kramer, and others investigated collections of Steiner triple systems that are mutually disjoint (i.e., no two Steiner systems in such a collection share a common triplet). It is known (Bays 1917, Kramer & Mesner 1974) that seven different S(2,3,9) systems can be generated to together cover all 84 triplets on a 9-set; it was also known by them that there are 15360 different ways to find such 7-sets of solutions, which reduce to two non-isomorphic solutions under relabeling, with multiplicities 6720 and 8640 respectively.
The corresponding question for finding thirteen different disjoint S(2,3,15) systems was asked by
James Sylvester in 1860 as an extension of the
Kirkman's schoolgirl problem, namely whether Kirkman's schoolgirls could march for an entire term of 13 weeks with no triplet of girls being repeated over the whole term. The question was solved by
RHF Denniston in 1974,
who constructed Week 1 as follows:
Day 1 ABJ CEM FKL HIN DGO
Day 2 ACH DEI FGM JLN BKO
Day 3 ADL BHM GIK CFN EJO
Day 4 AEG BIL CJK DMN FHO
Day 5 AFI BCD GHJ EKN LMO
Day 6 AKM DFJ EHL BGN CIO
Day 7 BEF CGL DHK IJM ANO
for girls labeled A to O, and constructed each subsequent week's solution from its immediate predecessor by changing A to B, B to C, ... L to M and M back to A, all while leaving N and O unchanged. The Week 13 solution, upon undergoing that relabeling, returns to the Week 1 solution. Denniston reported in his paper that the search he employed took 7 hours on an
Elliott 4130 computer at the
University of Leicester, and he immediately ended the search on finding the solution above, not looking to establish uniqueness. The number of non-isomorphic solutions to Sylvester's problem remains unknown as of 2021.
Properties
It is clear
from the definition of that
. (Equalities, while technically possible, lead to trivial systems.)
If exists, then taking all blocks containing a specific element and discarding that element gives a ''derived system'' . Therefore, the existence of is a necessary condition for the existence of .
The number of -element subsets in is
, while the number of -element subsets in each block is
. Since every -element subset is contained in exactly one block, we have
, or
:
where is the number of blocks. Similar reasoning about -element subsets containing a particular element gives us
, or
:
=
where is the number of blocks containing any given element. From these definitions follows the equation
. It is a necessary condition for the existence of that and are integers. As with any block design,
Fisher's inequality is true in Steiner systems.
Given the parameters of a Steiner system and a subset of size
, contained in at least one block, one can compute the number of blocks intersecting that subset in a fixed number of elements by constructing a
Pascal triangle. In particular, the number of blocks intersecting a fixed block in any number of elements is independent of the chosen block.
The number of blocks that contain any ''i''-element set of points is:
:
It can be shown that if there is a Steiner system , where is a
prime power greater than 1, then
1 or . In particular, a Steiner triple system must have . And as we have already mentioned, this is the only restriction on Steiner triple systems, that is, for each
natural number
In mathematics, the natural numbers are the numbers 0, 1, 2, 3, and so on, possibly excluding 0. Some start counting with 0, defining the natural numbers as the non-negative integers , while others start with 1, defining them as the positive in ...
, systems and exist.
History
Steiner triple systems were defined for the first time by
Wesley S. B. Woolhouse in 1844 in the Prize question #1733 of Lady's and Gentlemen's Diary. The posed problem was solved by . In 1850 Kirkman posed a variation of the problem known as
Kirkman's schoolgirl problem, which asks for triple systems having an additional property (resolvability). Unaware of Kirkman's work, reintroduced triple systems, and as this work was more widely known, the systems were named in his honor.
In 1910
Geoffrey Thomas Bennett gave a graphical representation for Steiner triple systems.
Mathieu groups
Several examples of Steiner systems are closely related to
group theory
In abstract algebra, group theory studies the algebraic structures known as group (mathematics), groups.
The concept of a group is central to abstract algebra: other well-known algebraic structures, such as ring (mathematics), rings, field ( ...
. In particular, the
finite simple groups called
Mathieu groups arise as
automorphism groups of Steiner systems:
* The
Mathieu group M11 is the automorphism group of a S(4,5,11) Steiner system
* The
Mathieu group M12 is the automorphism group of a S(5,6,12) Steiner system
* The
Mathieu group M22 is the unique index 2 subgroup of the automorphism group of a S(3,6,22) Steiner system
* The
Mathieu group M23 is the automorphism group of a S(4,7,23) Steiner system
* The
Mathieu group M24 is the automorphism group of a S(5,8,24) Steiner system.
The Steiner system S(5, 6, 12)
There is a unique S(5,6,12) Steiner system; its automorphism group is the
Mathieu group M
12, and in that context it is denoted by W
12.
Projective line construction
This construction is due to Carmichael (1937).
Add a new element, call it , to the 11 elements of the
finite field
In mathematics, a finite field or Galois field (so-named in honor of Évariste Galois) is a field (mathematics), field that contains a finite number of Element (mathematics), elements. As with any field, a finite field is a Set (mathematics), s ...
11 (that is, the integers mod 11). This set, , of 12 elements can be formally identified with the points of the
projective line
In projective geometry and mathematics more generally, a projective line is, roughly speaking, the extension of a usual line by a point called a '' point at infinity''. The statement and the proof of many theorems of geometry are simplified by the ...
over
11. Call the following specific subset of size 6,
:
a "block" (it contains together with the 5 nonzero squares in
11). From this block, we obtain the other blocks of the (5,6,12) system by repeatedly applying the
linear fractional transformations:
:
where are in
11 and .
With the usual conventions of defining and , these functions map the set onto itself. In geometric language, they are
projectivities of the projective line. They form a
group under composition which is the
projective special linear group (2,11) of order 660. There are exactly five elements of this group that leave the starting block fixed setwise, namely those such that and so that . So there will be 660/5 = 132 images of that block. As a consequence of the multiply transitive property of this group
acting on this set, any subset of five elements of will appear in exactly one of these 132 images of size six.
Kitten construction
An alternative construction of W
12 is obtained by use of the 'kitten' of R.T. Curtis, which was intended as a "hand calculator" to write down blocks one at a time. The kitten method is based on completing patterns in a 3x3 grid of numbers, which represent an
affine geometry
In mathematics, affine geometry is what remains of Euclidean geometry when ignoring (mathematicians often say "forgetting") the metric notions of distance and angle.
As the notion of '' parallel lines'' is one of the main properties that is i ...
on the
vector space
In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
F
3xF
3, an S(2,3,9) system.
Construction from K6 graph factorization
The relations between the
graph factors of the
complete graph K6 generate an S(5,6,12). A K
6 graph has 6 vertices, 15 edges, 15
perfect matchings, and 6 different 1-factorizations (ways to partition the edges into disjoint perfect matchings). The set of vertices (labeled 123456) and the set of factorizations (labeled ''ABCDEF'') provide one block each. Every pair of factorizations has exactly one perfect matching in common. Suppose factorizations ''A'' and ''B'' have the common matching with edges 12, 34 and 56. Add three new blocks ''AB''3456, 12''AB''56, and 1234''AB'', replacing each edge in the common matching with the factorization labels in turn. Similarly add three more blocks 12''CDEF'', 34''CDEF'', and 56''CDEF'', replacing the factorization labels by the corresponding edge labels of the common matching. Do this for all 15 pairs of factorizations to add 90 new blocks. Finally, take the full set of
combinations of 6 objects out of 12, and discard any combination that has 5 or more objects in common with any of the 92 blocks generated so far. Exactly 40 blocks remain, resulting in blocks of the S(5,6,12). This method works because there is an
outer automorphism on the symmetric group ''S''6, which maps the vertices to factorizations and the edges to partitions. Permuting the vertices causes the factorizations to permute differently, in accordance with the outer automorphism.
The Steiner system S(5, 8, 24)
The Steiner system S(5, 8, 24), also known as the Witt design or Witt geometry, was first described by and rediscovered by . This system is connected with many of the
sporadic simple groups and with the
exceptional 24-dimensional
lattice known as the
Leech lattice
In mathematics, the Leech lattice is an even unimodular lattice Λ24 in 24-dimensional Euclidean space which is one of the best models for the kissing number problem. It was discovered by . It may also have been discovered (but not published) by Er ...
. The automorphism group of S(5, 8, 24) is the
Mathieu group M24, and in that context the design is denoted W
24 ("W" for "Witt")
Direct lexicographic generation
All 8-element subsets of a 24-element set are generated in
lexicographic order
In mathematics, the lexicographic or lexicographical order (also known as lexical order, or dictionary order) is a generalization of the alphabetical order of the dictionaries to sequences of ordered symbols or, more generally, of elements of a ...
, and any such subset which differs from some subset already found in fewer than four positions is discarded.
The list of octads for the elements 01, 02, 03, ..., 22, 23, 24 is then:
:: 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08
:: 01 02 03 04 09 10 11 12
:: 01 02 03 04 13 14 15 16
:: .
:: . (next 753 octads omitted)
:: .
:: 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
:: 13 14 15 16 21 22 23 24
:: 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Each single element occurs 253 times somewhere in some octad. Each pair occurs 77 times. Each triple occurs 21 times. Each quadruple (tetrad) occurs 5 times. Each quintuple (pentad) occurs once. Not every hexad, heptad or octad occurs.
Construction from the binary Golay code
The 4096 codewords of the 24-bit
binary Golay code
In mathematics and electronics engineering, a binary Golay code is a type of linear error-correcting code used in digital communications. The binary Golay code, along with the ternary Golay code, has a particularly deep and interesting connection ...
are generated, and the 759 codewords with a
Hamming weight
The Hamming weight of a string (computer science), string is the number of symbols that are different from the zero-symbol of the alphabet used. It is thus equivalent to the Hamming distance from the all-zero string of the same length. For the mo ...
of 8 correspond to the S(5,8,24) system.
The Golay code can be constructed by many methods, such as generating all 24-bit binary strings in lexicographic order and discarding those that
differ from some earlier one in fewer than 8 positions. The result looks like this:
000000000000000000000000
000000000000000011111111
000000000000111100001111
.
. (next 4090 24-bit strings omitted)
.
111111111111000011110000
111111111111111100000000
111111111111111111111111
The codewords form a
group under the
XOR operation.
Projective line construction
This construction is due to Carmichael (1931).
Add a new element, call it , to the 23 elements of the
finite field
In mathematics, a finite field or Galois field (so-named in honor of Évariste Galois) is a field (mathematics), field that contains a finite number of Element (mathematics), elements. As with any field, a finite field is a Set (mathematics), s ...
23 (that is, the integers mod 23). This set, , of 24 elements can be formally identified with the points of the
projective line
In projective geometry and mathematics more generally, a projective line is, roughly speaking, the extension of a usual line by a point called a '' point at infinity''. The statement and the proof of many theorems of geometry are simplified by the ...
over
23. Call the following specific subset of size 8,
:
a "block". (We can take any octad of the extended
binary Golay code
In mathematics and electronics engineering, a binary Golay code is a type of linear error-correcting code used in digital communications. The binary Golay code, along with the ternary Golay code, has a particularly deep and interesting connection ...
, seen as a quadratic residue code.) From this block, we obtain the other blocks of the (5,8,24) system by repeatedly applying the
linear fractional transformations:
:
where are in
23 and .
With the usual conventions of defining and , these functions map the set onto itself. In geometric language, they are
projectivities of the projective line. They form a
group under composition which is the
projective special linear group (2,23) of order 6072. There are exactly 8 elements of this group that leave the initial block fixed setwise. So there will be 6072/8 = 759 images of that block. These form the octads of S(5,8,24).
Construction from the Miracle Octad Generator
The
Miracle Octad Generator (MOG) is a tool to generate octads, such as those containing specified subsets. It consists of a 4x6 array with certain weights assigned to the rows. In particular, an 8-subset should obey three rules in order to be an octad of S(5,8,24). First, each of the 6 columns should have the same
parity, that is, they should all have an odd number of cells or they should all have an even number of cells. Second, the top row should have the same parity as each of the columns. Third, the rows are respectively multiplied by the weights 0, 1, 2, and 3 over the
finite field of order 4, and column sums are calculated for the 6 columns, with multiplication and addition using the
finite field arithmetic definitions. The resulting column sums should form a valid ''
hexacodeword'' of the form where ''a, b, c'' are also from the finite field of order 4. If the column sums' parities don't match the row sum parity, or each other, or if there do not exist ''a, b, c'' such that the column sums form a valid hexacodeword, then that subset of 8 is not an octad of S(5,8,24).
The MOG is based on creating a
bijection
In mathematics, a bijection, bijective function, or one-to-one correspondence is a function between two sets such that each element of the second set (the codomain) is the image of exactly one element of the first set (the domain). Equival ...
(Conwell 1910, "The three-space PG(3,2) and its group") between the 35 ways to partition an 8-set into two different 4-sets, and the 35 lines of the
Fano 3-space PG(3,2). It is also geometrically related (Cullinane, "Symmetry Invariance in a Diamond Ring", Notices of the AMS, pp A193-194, Feb 1979) to the 35 different ways to partition a 4x4 array into 4 different groups of 4 cells each, such that if the 4x4 array represents a four-dimensional finite
affine space
In mathematics, an affine space is a geometric structure that generalizes some of the properties of Euclidean spaces in such a way that these are independent of the concepts of distance and measure of angles, keeping only the properties relat ...
, then the groups form a set of parallel subspaces.
See also
*
Constant weight code
*
Kirkman's schoolgirl problem
*
Sylvester–Gallai configuration
Notes
References
References
*
* . 2nd ed. (1999) .
*
*
*
*
*
* .
*
*
*
* .
*
External links
*
*
Steiner systemsby Andries E. Brouwer
by Dr. Alberto Delgado, Gabe Hart, and Michael Kolkebeck
by Johan E. Mebius
{{Incidence structures
Combinatorial design
Design of experiments
Families of sets
de:Steiner-Tripel-System