Title: PERMUTATION GROUPS, COMPLEXES, AND REARRANGEABLE CONNECTING NETWORKS
1PERMUTATION GROUPS, COMPLEXES, AND REARRANGEABLE
CONNECTING NETWORKS
V.E.BENE
SUNITHA THODUPUNURI
2Connecting Networks
- A connecting network is an arrangement of
switches and transmission links through which
certain terminals can be connected together in
many combinations. - Â Eg Telephone central offices.
- Performance of the connecting networks
- Structure of the connecting networks
3Combinatorial properties of Connecting Networks
- Blocking
- NonBlocking
- Rearrangeable
4Rearrangeability A connecting network is
rearrangeable if its permitted states realize
every assignments of inlets to outlets or
alternatively if given any state of the network,
any inlet idle in x, and any outlet idle in x,
there is a way of assigning new routes (if
necessary) to the calls in progress in x so as
to lead to new state of the network in which idle
inlet can be connected to the idle outlet.
5(No Transcript)
6Goal
- What stages and link patterns are used to
construct the rearrangeable networks?
7Overview
- General notion of a stage of switching in
connecting network - Formulation of the problem in terms of partitions
and permutation groups using notation of stage - How a stage generates complexes?
- Rearrangeability theorems for connecting
- ü First theorem gives sufficient conditions
for connecting terminals and link
patterns which gives rise to rearrangeable
networks - ü Second theorem indicates a simple way of
describing link patterns and stages
that satisfy the hypothesis of first theorem
8A Network in terms of Group Theory
- Stage - Column of switches
- Link Pattern - Each link pattern i.e., the number
of crosspoints on a stage, N can be represented
as the permutation on 1,2,3. N - assume I - The set of inlets
- ? - The set of outlets
- Stage S is a subset of I??
- A stage S is made of square switches if and only
if there is a partition ? of 1,2,3. N such
that - S ? (A ? A)
- A ? ?
9Group theory terms Contd
- Group Set of elements with an operation
- Eg Permutation group permutations on 1,2,3.
N - Complex Subset of a Group is called a Complex
- Eg A subset K?G is a complex
- Imprimitivity If Inlets and outlets are numbered
1,2,3. N and a stage contains enough cross
points it can be used to connect every inlet to
some outlet in one to one fashion with no inlet
connected to more than one outlet and vice-versa
10Group theory terms Contd
- A stage can generate a permutation
- Eg If a stage S generates a permutation ?, if
there is a setting of N switches of S which
connects each inlet to one and only outlet in
such a way that i is connected to ?(i), i1,2,,
N i.e., (i, ?(i)) ?S - The set of permutations is generated by a stage S
is denoted by P(S) - Similarly, a network with N inlets and N
outlets can generate a permutation
11Example If two stages S1, S2 are connected by a
link pattern corresponding to a permutation ?
then it generates exactly the permutations in the
set P(S1) ?
P(S2) Generally, If a network has s stages and
are connected by link patterns corresponding to
the permutations ?1,? 2,? 3.?s-1 then the
network generates the complex P(S1) ?1P(S2) ?2
.. ?s-1P(Ss)
12The generation of complexes by stages
- A stage is made of square switches if there is a
partition ? on 1,2,3N such that - S ? (A ? A)
- A ? ?
- A stage can generate a subgroup only if it
contains a substage made of square switches - i.e., any stage made of square switches
necessarily arise in the generation of the
symmetric group by products of complexes some of
which are subgroups
13Group Theory Terminology
- Suppose X, Y are sets
- XY
- ? Y?X (one-one function)
- B?Y
- ?1, ?2 partitions on X,Y
- ?(B)x ? X ? -1 (x) ? B
- ? hits ?1 from B if and only if A ? ?1 implies
?(B) ? A ? ? - ? covers ?1 from ?2 if and only if B ? ?2 implies
? hits ?1 from B
14Group theory terminology contd
- ?(?2) is the permutation of X induced by ? acting
on the elements of ?2 i.e., - ?(?2) ?(B) B ? ?2
- ?B is a restriction of ? to B
- A ?X
- A?1 is the partition of A
induced by ?1 - A?1 C?A C ? ?1
- ?B covers ?1 from ?2 if and only if ?B covers
?(B)?1 from B?2
15Generating the permutation group
- P(S1) ?1P(S2) ?2 .. ?s-1P(Ss)
- Let s gt 3 be an odd integer, let f1, , fs-1be
permutations on X 1, , N , , let ?k, - k 1, ..., s, and ?k, k 1, ..., ½(s-1),be
partitions of X, and let - X k 0
- fk -1 ... f1/2(S-1) -1 ( ?k ) k 1, ,
½(s-1) - ? fk f1/2(s1) (?s-k ) k ½(s1),
, s-1 - X k s
- Suppose that
- If s 3, then ?k lt ?k1, k 0, , ½(s-3).
- ?1/2(s1) ?1/2(s-1)
- For k 1, , ½(s-1), and every B ? ?k-1, fk -1
B-covers ?k from fk from fk(?k) - For k ½(s1), , s-1, and every B ? ?k1, fk
B-covers ?k1 from fk-1(?k) - If A ? ?k and B ? ?k-1 ? ?k1/2(s1) then
- B?k B?s-k1 A , k 1, ,
½(s-1). - Let Hk, k 1, , s be the largest strictly
imprimitive sub group of S(X) whose sets of
imprimitivity are exactly the elements of ?k
(i.e. A ? ?k implies Af f ? Hk S(A) ).
Then the complex K defined by - K H1f1H2 Hs-1fs-1Hs
16Assignments of Inlets and outlets of a
rearrangeable network
VS1?1.?s-1Ss ?k ?-1s-k SkSs-k1
17Conclusion
- A network is rearrangeable if the product of
complexes generated by the stages of the network
is a symmetric group. (following the conditions
specified by BENE)
18References
- Benes V.E., Mathematical Theory of Connecting
Networks and Telephone Traffic, 1962, pp 82-135