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A linear threshold for uniqueness of solutions to random jigsaw puzzles (1701.04813v2)

Published 17 Jan 2017 in math.PR, cs.DM, and math.CO

Abstract: We consider a problem introduced by Mossel and Ross [Shotgun assembly of labeled graphs, arXiv:1504.07682]. Suppose a random $n\times n$ jigsaw puzzle is constructed by independently and uniformly choosing the shape of each "jig" from $q$ possibilities. We are given the shuffled pieces. Then, depending on $q$, what is the probability that we can reassemble the puzzle uniquely? We say that two solutions of a puzzle are similar if they only differ by permutation of duplicate pieces, and rotation of rotationally symmetric pieces. In this paper, we show that, with high probability, such a puzzle has at least two non-similar solutions when $2\leq q \leq \frac{2}{\sqrt{e}}n$, all solutions are similar when $q\geq (2+\varepsilon)n$, and the solution is unique when $q=\omega(n)$.

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