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2-Core Towers in Integer Partitions

Updated 22 November 2025
  • 2-Core Towers are recursive combinatorial structures that decompose integer partitions into a unique 2-core and iteratively derived 2-quotients.
  • They provide explicit generating functions and congruences that quantify 2-core sizes and reveal the asymptotic behavior of partition statistics.
  • Their interconnections with modular forms and representation theory shed light on modular partition congruences and p-modular combinatorics.

A 2-core tower is a recursive combinatorial and algebraic structure associated with integer partitions, in which each partition is decomposed into its 2-core and a collection of 2-quotients, and this process is iteratively applied to the quotients themselves. The theory of 2-core towers provides refined enumeration results, explicit generating functions, and asymptotics for statistics such as the total 2-core size and the 2-defect of partitions. This structure also intersects representation theory, modular forms, and arithmetic geometry, as evidenced by its connections to class field theory and modular partition congruence phenomena (Rolen, 2015).

1. The 2-Core and 2-Core Tower Construction

Given an integer partition λ=(λ1λ20)\lambda=(\lambda_1 \ge \lambda_2 \ge \dots \ge 0), its Young diagram defines hook-lengths for each cell. The 2-core λ(2)\lambda^{(2)} of λ\lambda is the partition obtained by iteratively removing all hooks of even length, regardless of order, until only hooks of odd length remain. This process terminates with a unique 2-core for every partition. The construction of the 2-core tower begins with the partition itself (row 0), followed by its 2-quotient—a pair of partitions (row 1)—where the original partition is uniquely reconstructed from its 2-core and 2-quotient. The procedure continues recursively: each partition in row jj gives rise to two partitions in row j+1j+1, generating a binary-tree-like structure. Formally, if aj(λ)a_j(\lambda) denotes row jj of the pre-tower and Bj(λ)B_j(\lambda) the sequence of 2-cores of the partitions in aj(λ)a_j(\lambda), then B0(λ)=λ(2)B_0(\lambda)=\lambda^{(2)} and λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}0 is the pair of 2-cores of the 2-quotient of λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}1 (Rolen, 2015).

2. Generating Functions for Row Sizes in 2-Core Towers

Let λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}2 denote the total size (sum of parts) of all partitions in the λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}3th row of the 2-core tower of λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}4, and λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}5 the set of all partitions. The associated generating function is defined as

λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}6

The closed formula for λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}7 is

λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}8

where λ(2)\lambda^{(2)}9 and λ\lambda0 with λ\lambda1 the sum of divisors. For λ\lambda2, this gives the generating function for the total size of the 2-cores among all partitions:

λ\lambda3

These identities follow directly from the λ\lambda4-core tower theory specialized to λ\lambda5 (Rolen, 2015).

3. The 2-Defect and Its Asymptotics

The 2-defect λ\lambda6 of a partition λ\lambda7 is defined as

λ\lambda8

which for λ\lambda9 aligns with the defect notion in the modular representation theory of jj0. The generating function

jj1

satisfies

jj2

where jj3 is the partition function. By asymptotic analysis via Ingham's Tauberian theorem, it follows

jj4

so that the expected size of the 2-defect for a partition of jj5 is asymptotic to jj6 as jj7 (Rolen, 2015).

4. Congruences and Identities Involving 2-Core Towers

Let jj8 denote the total size of all 2-cores among partitions of jj9. This function satisfies the congruence

j+1j+10

Furthermore, j+1j+11 satisfies a recursion involving the number j+1j+12 of 2-regular partitions (partitions with no even part):

j+1j+13

Because j+1j+14 is constructed from Eisenstein-series components, it is congruent modulo powers of primes j+1j+15 to half-integral weight modular forms, implying the presence of additional Ramanujan-type congruences for the sum of 2-core sizes (Rolen, 2015).

5. Relation to General j+1j+16-Core Tower Theory

The 2-core tower theory is a specialization of the general j+1j+17-core tower framework. Theorem 2.1 in Rolen's work asserts that every partition is uniquely reconstructed from its j+1j+18-core and j+1j+19-quotient, and iteration yields the full aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)0-core pre-tower. The weighted sum aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)1 for the aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)2th row has the form

aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)3

specializing to aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)4 gives the formulas for the 2-core case. The aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)5-defect generating function is

aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)6

Consequently, all properties of the 2-core tower (explicit generating functions, defects, asymptotics, and congruences) are instances of these general results with aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)7. The analytic formulas rely on the partition generating function, the sum-of-divisors function, and modular forms identities (Rolen, 2015).

6. Interconnections and Significance in Representation Theory and Number Theory

The structure of the 2-core tower arises naturally in several areas. In the representation theory of symmetric groups, the aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)8-defect coincides with standard defect statistics for primes, and the unique decomposition of a partition into its aj(λ)a_j(\lambda)9-core and jj0-quotient underlies combinatorial constructions such as the modular branching rules. In number theory, the generating functions and congruence formulas for rows and sizes of 2-core towers link with modular forms and Ramanujan-type congruences. The general approach, grounded in jj1-series, Eisenstein series, and Tauberian analysis, demonstrates the depth and generality of the jj2-core tower perspective and serves as a model for analogous results in jj3-modular combinatorics (Rolen, 2015).

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