General Dynamics and Generation Mapping for Collatz-type Sequences (2409.07929v1)
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.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.