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Sums and differences of correlated random sets

Many fundamental questions in additive number theory (such as Goldbach's conjecture, Fermat's last theorem, and the Twin Primes conjecture) can be expressed in the language of sum and difference sets. As a typical pair of elements contributes one sum and two differences, we expect that $|A-A| > |A+A|$ for a finite set $A$. However, in 2006 Martin and O'Bryant showed that a positive proportion of subsets of $\{0, \dots, n\}$ are sum-dominant, and Zhao later showed that this proportion converges to a positive limit as $n \to \infty$. Related problems, such as constructing explicit families of sum-dominant sets, computing the value of the limiting proportion, and investigating the behavior as the probability of including a given element in $A$ to go to zero, have been analyzed extensively. We consider many of these problems in a more general setting. Instead of just one set $A$, we study sums and differences of pairs of \emph{correlated} sets $(A,B)$. Specifically, we place each element $a \in \{0,\dots, n\}$ in $A$ with probability $p$, while $a$ goes in $B$ with probability $ρ_1$ if $a \in A$ and probability $ρ_2$ if $a \not \in A$. If $|A+B| > |(A-B) \cup (B-A)|$, we call the pair $(A,B)$ a \emph{sum-dominant $(p,ρ_1, ρ_2)$-pair}. We prove that for any fixed $\vecρ=(p, ρ_1, ρ_2)$ in $(0,1)^3$, $(A,B)$ is a sum-dominant $(p,ρ_1, ρ_2)$-pair with positive probability, and show that this probability approaches a limit $P(\vecρ)$. Furthermore, we show that the limit function $P(\vecρ)$ is continuous. We also investigate what happens as $p$ decays with $n$, generalizing results of Hegarty-Miller on phase transitions. Finally, we find the smallest sizes of MSTD pairs.

preprint2014arXivOpen access
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