Periodicity and Unbordered Words: A Proof of the Extended Duval Conjecture
Abstract: The relationship between the length of a word and the maximum length of its unbordered factors is investigated in this paper. Consider a finite word w of length n. We call a word bordered, if it has a proper prefix which is also a suffix of that word. Let f(w) denote the maximum length of all unbordered factors of w, and let p(w) denote the period of w. Clearly, f(w) < p(w)+1. We establish that f(w) = p(w), if w has an unbordered prefix of length f(w) and n > 2f(w)-2. This bound is tight and solves the stronger version of a 21 years old conjecture by Duval. It follows from this result that, in general, n > 3f(w)-3 implies f(w) = p(w) which gives an improved bound for the question asked by Ehrenfeucht and Silberger in 1979.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.