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General Dynamics and Generation Mapping for Collatz-type Sequences (2409.07929v1)

Published 12 Sep 2024 in math.NT

Abstract: Let an odd integer (\mathcal{X}) be expressed as $\left{\sum\limits_{M > m}b_M2M\right}+2m-1,$ where $b_M\in{0,1}$ and $2m-1$ is referred to as the Governor. In Collatz-type functions, a high index Governor is eventually reduced to $21-1$. For the $3\mathcal{Z}+1$ sequence, the Governor occurring in the Trivial cycle is $21-1$, while for the $5\mathcal{Z}+1$ sequence, the Trivial Governors are $22-1$ and $21-1$. Therefore, in these specific sequences, the Collatz function reduces the Governor $2m - 1$ to the Trivial Governor $2{\mathcal{T}} - 1$. Once this Trivial Governor is reached, it can evolve to a higher index Governor through interactions with other terms. This feature allows $\mathcal{X}$ to reappear in a Collatz-type sequence, since $2m - 1 = 2{m - 1} + \cdots + 2{\mathcal{T} + 1} + 2{\mathcal{T}}+(2{\mathcal{T}}-1).$ Thus, if $\mathcal{X}$ reappears, at least one odd ancestor of $\left{\sum\limits_{M > m}b_M2M\right}+2{m-1}+\cdots+2{\mathcal{T}+1}+2{\mathcal{T}}+(2{\mathcal{T}}-1)$ must have the Governor $2m-1$. Ancestor mapping shows that all odd ancestors of $\mathcal{X}$ have the Trivial Governor for the respective Collatz sequence. This implies that odd integers that repeat in the $3\mathcal{Z} + 1$ sequence have the Governor $21 - 1$, while those forming a repeating cycle in the $5\mathcal{Z} + 1$ sequence have either $22 - 1$ or $21 - 1$ as the Governor. Successor mapping for the $3\mathcal{Z} + 1$ sequence further indicates that there are no auxiliary cycles, as the Trivial Governor is always transformed into a different index Governor. Similarly, successor mapping for the $5\mathcal{Z} + 1$ sequence reveals that the smallest odd integers forming an auxiliary cycle are smaller than $25$. Finally, attempts to identify integers that diverge for the $3\mathcal{Z} + 1$ sequence suggest that no such integers exist.

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