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Shuffling matrices, Kronecker product and Discrete Fourier Transform (1605.09635v1)

Published 31 May 2016 in math.CO

Abstract: We define and investigate a family of permutations matrices, called shuffling matrices, acting on a set of $N=n_1\cdots n_m$ elements, where $m\geq 2$ and $n_i\geq 2$ for any $i=1,\ldots, m$. These elements are identified with the vertices of the $m$-th level of a rooted tree with branch indices $(n_1,\ldots, n_m)$. Each of such matrices is induced by a permutation of $Sym(m)$ and it turns out that, in the case in which one considers the cyclic permutation $(1\ \ldots\ m)$, the corresponding permutation is the classical perfect shuffle. We give a combinatorial interpretation of these permutations in terms of lexicographic order of the vertices of the tree. This allows us to describe their fixed points. We show that our permutation matrices can be used to let the Kronecker product of matrices commute or, more generally, rearrange in an arbitrary order. Moreover, we show that the group generated by such permutations does depend only on the branch indices of the tree, but it is independent from their order. In the case in which such indices coincide, we prove that the corresponding group is a copy of $Sym(m)$ inside $Sym(nm)$. Finally, we give an application of shuffling matrices in the context of the Discrete Fourier Transform.

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