1 Introduction
A partition $\lambda $ of a positive integer n is a finite weakly decreasing sequence of positive integers $\lambda =(\lambda _1,\lambda _2,\ldots ,\lambda _r)$ such that $\sum _{i=1}^r \lambda _i=n$ . The terms $\lambda _{i}$ are called the parts of $\lambda $ and the number of parts of $\lambda $ is called the length of $\lambda $ , denoted $\ell (\lambda )$ . The weight of $\lambda $ is the sum of its parts, denoted by $|\lambda |$ . We use $m(\lambda )$ to denote the largest part of $\lambda $ . The Ferrers graph of $\lambda $ is an array of left-justified cells with $\lambda _{i}$ cells in the ith row. The Durfee square of a partition is the largest possible square contained within the Ferrers graph and anchored in the upper left-hand corner of the Ferrers graph. The conjugate of $\lambda $ , denoted $\lambda ^T$ , is the partition whose Ferrers graph is obtained from that of $\lambda $ by interchanging rows and columns.
A partition $\lambda $ is said to be self-conjugate if $\lambda =\lambda ^T$ . It is well known that the number of self-conjugate partitions of n equals the number of partitions of n into distinct odd parts. This result is due to Sylvester [Reference Sylvester5]. Andrews and Ballantine [Reference Andrews and Ballantine2] recently proved that the number of parts in all self-conjugate partitions of n is almost always equal to the number of partitions of n in which no odd part is repeated and there is exactly one even part (possibly repeated).
There is an interesting variation of self-conjugate partitions. Assuming that $\lambda $ is a partition of n, then $\lambda $ is said to be nearly self-conjugate if the Ferrers graphs of $\lambda $ and its conjugate have exactly $n-1$ cells in common. For example, there are two nearly self-conjugate partitions of $5$ , which are depicted in Figure 1.
Let $\mathrm {nsc}(n)$ count the number of nearly self-conjugate partitions of n. The sequence $\{\mathrm {nsc}(n)\}_{n\geq 0}$ seems to be first considered by Campbell, who conjectured the generating function of $\mathrm {nsc}(n)$ (see [Reference Campbell and Sloane4]).
Conjecture 1.1. We have
Throughout the paper, we adopt the following q-series notation:
To interpret the right-hand side of (1.1), Campbell and Chern (‘Nearly self-conjugate integer partitions’, submitted for publication) introduced symplectic partitions, in which the smallest part equals $2$ and all others are distinct odd parts. Clearly, the generating function of twice the number of symplectic partitions equals the expression on the right-hand side of (1.1). Campbell and Chern, established a correspondence showing that the number of nearly self-conjugate partitions of n is equal to twice the number of symplectic partitions of n, which confirms Conjecture 1.1.
In this note, we aim to prove Conjecture 1.1 by analysing the structure of nearly self-conjugate partitions and using elementary techniques (see Section 2). In Section 3, we give an equivalent statement of Conjecture 1.1 and provide a combinatorial proof.
2 Analytic proof
Let $\mathscr {N}$ denote the set of nearly self-conjugate partitions and $\mathscr {D}$ denote the set of partitions into distinct parts. Let $\mathscr {G}$ denote the set of gap-free partitions (partitions in which every integer less than the largest part must appear at least once) and $\mathscr {G}_k$ denote the subset of $\mathscr {G}$ consisting of the partitions with the largest part being k. Given a partition $\lambda \in \mathscr {G}$ , we define
That is, $\mathrm {rep}(\lambda )$ counts the number of repeated parts less than the largest part of $\lambda $ . For example, if $\lambda =(4,4,3,2,2,1,1)$ , then $\mathrm {rep}(\lambda )=2$ . For a partition $\lambda \in \mathscr {D}$ , we use $c(\lambda )$ to denote the number of separate sequences of consecutive integers of $\lambda $ . For example, if $\mu =(8,7,5,4,3,1)$ , then $c(\,\mu )=3$ , counting the sequences
Remark 2.1. $c(\lambda )$ serves as an important statistic in Sylvester’s refinement of Euler’s partition identity [Reference Andrews and Eriksson3, page 88], namely, the number of odd partitions of n with exactly k different parts equals the number of distinct partitions of n into k separate sequences of consecutive integers.
We first give an auxiliary result.
Lemma 2.2. We have
Proof. Recall the Frobenius symbol [Reference Andrews and Eriksson3] of $\lambda $ , which is a two-rowed array
with $a_1>a_2>\cdots >a_k\geq 0$ and $b_1>b_2>\cdots >b_k\geq 0$ , where $a_i$ (respectively, $b_i$ ) counts the number of cells to the right of (respectively, below) the ith diagonal entry of $\lambda $ in its Ferrers graph and k is the size of the Durfee square of $\lambda $ . Then,
Now we add one to each term of the Frobenius symbol of $\lambda $ to get a modified Frobenius symbol,
with $\alpha _1>\alpha _2>\cdots >\alpha _k\geq 1$ and $\beta _1>\beta _2>\cdots >\beta _k\geq 1$ .
If $\lambda \in \mathscr {N}$ , there exists exactly one j such that $|\alpha _j-\beta _j|=1$ and $\alpha _i=\beta _i$ for all $i\neq j$ . Assuming that $\alpha _j-\beta _j=1$ ,
Conversely, for a partition $\beta =(\,\beta _1,\beta _2,\ldots ,\beta _k)\in \mathscr {D}$ , there exists exactly $c(\,\beta )$ separate sequences of consecutive integers. For each i with $1\leq i\leq c(\,\beta )$ , let $\beta _{j_i}$ be the first integer in the ith sequence of consecutive integers in $\beta $ . We have
We now construct a partition $\alpha ^i=(\alpha ^i_1,\alpha ^i_2,\ldots ,\alpha ^i_{k})$ for each i with $1\leq i\leq c(\,\beta )$ by
Then, we have a modified Frobenius symbol with the first row being $\alpha ^i$ and the second row being $\beta $ , which corresponds to a nearly self-conjugate partition. Thus, in total, there are $c(\,\beta )$ nearly self-conjugate partitions with such modified Frobenius symbols.
If $\beta _j-\alpha _j=1$ , we can exchange $\alpha $ and $\beta $ in the Frobenius symbol and obtain the same conclusion. Consequently, we can conclude that
For a partition $\lambda \in \mathscr {D}$ , its conjugate $\lambda ^T$ must be a gap-free partition and it follows that $\ell (\lambda )=m(\lambda ^T)$ and $c(\lambda )=\mathrm {rep}(\lambda ^T)+1$ . Thus,
This completes the proof.
We are now in a position to prove (1.1). By standard combinatorial arguments,
Differentiating the above equation with respect to z, putting $z=1$ and replacing q by $q^2$ ,
By Lemma 2.2,
Recall Euler’s identity [Reference Andrews1, page 19],
Replacing q by $q^2$ and z by q,
From (2.1) and the above identity,
This completes the proof.
3 Equivalent statement
Multiplying both sides of (1.1) by $1-q^{2}$ and comparing the coefficients of $q^n$ ,
where $\mathrm {do}_{\geq 3}(n)$ denotes the number of partitions of n into distinct odd parts with the smallest part at least $3$ .
Based on the classical bijection [Reference Sylvester5] between the partitions of n into distinct odd parts and the self-conjugate partitions of n, Campbell and Chern (‘Nearly self-conjugate integer partitions’, submitted for publication) established the following result.
Lemma 3.1 (Campbell and Chern)
The number of nearly self-conjugate partitions of n equals twice the number of partitions of n with exactly one even part such that the differences between parts are at least $2$ .
Let $\mathscr {O}(n)$ denote the set of partitions of n with exactly one even part and the differences between parts being at least $2$ . Thus, Conjecture 1.1 could be restated as follows.
Proposition 3.2. For $n\geq 2$ ,
Proof. We first introduce an injection $\varphi : \mathscr {O}(n-2)\rightarrow \mathscr {O}(n)$ for every $n\geq 2$ . Assuming that $\lambda =(\lambda _1,\lambda _{2},\ldots )\in \mathscr {O}(n-2)$ , we define $\varphi (\lambda )=\mu \in \mathscr {O}(n)$ as follows.
Case 1: If $\lambda $ has only one part, then this unique part must be even. Hence, we can assume that $\lambda =(2m)$ and define $\mu =(2m+2)$ .
Case 2: If $\ell (\lambda )\geq 2$ and the smallest part is odd, we assume that
We define $\mu =(\lambda _1,\ldots ,\lambda _{i-1},2m+1,\lambda _{i+1}+1,\lambda _{i+2},\ldots )$ . It is easy to see that $\ell (\,\mu )=\ell (\lambda )\geq 2$ and the largest part of $\mu $ is odd.
Case 3: If $\ell (\lambda )\geq 2$ and the smallest part is even, we suppose that
and define $\mu =(\lambda _1+1,\lambda _2,\ldots ,\lambda _{i-1},2m+1)$ . It is clear that $\ell (\,\mu )=\ell (\lambda )\geq 2$ and the largest part of $\mu $ is even and the smallest part of $\mu $ is greater than or equal to 3.
We observe that each partition in $\mathscr {O}(n)\!\setminus \!\varphi (\mathscr {O}(n-2))$ is a partition $\mu =(\kern1pt\mu _1,\mu _2,\ldots ,\mu _r)$ with $r\geq 2$ , $\mu _1$ being even and $\mu _r=1$ . Obviously, $\mu _1-\mu _2\geq 3$ . Subtracting $1$ from the largest part and removing the smallest part, we get a partition into distinct odd parts with each part at least $3$ , which is counted by $\mathrm {do}_{\geq 3}(n-2)$ . This completes the proof.
Acknowledgement
The authors would like to thank the referee for helpful comments and suggestions.