Integer complexity: Stability and self-similarity
Abstract: Define $||n||$ to be the complexity of $n$, the smallest number of ones needed to write $n$ using an arbitrary combination of addition and multiplication. The set $\mathscr{D}$ of defects, differences $\delta(n):=||n||-3\log_3 n$, is known to be a well-ordered subset of $[0,\infty)$, with order type $\omega\omega$. This is proved by showing that, for any $r$, there is a finite set $\mathcal{S}s$ of certain multilinear polynomials, called low-defect polynomials, such that $\delta(n)\le s$ if and only if one can write $n = f(3{k_1},\ldots,3{k_r})3{k{r+1}}$. In this paper we show that, in addition to it being true that $\mathscr{D}$ (and thus $\overline{\mathscr{D}}$) has order type $\omega\omega$, this set satisifies a sort of self-similarity property with $\overline{\mathscr{D}}' = \overline{\mathscr{D}} + 1$. This is proven by restricting attention to substantial low-defect polynomials, ones that can be themselves written efficiently in a certain sense, and showing that in a certain sense the values of these polynomials at powers of $3$ have complexity equal to the na\"ive upper bound most of the time. As a result, we also prove that, under appropriate conditions on $a$ and $b$, numbers of the form $b(a3k+1)3\ell$ will, for all sufficiently large $k$, have complexity equal to the na\"ive upper bound. These results resolve various earlier conjectures of the second author.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.