Dejean's theorem (formerly Dejean's conjecture) is a statement about repetitions in infinite strings of symbols. It belongs to the field of combinatorics on words; it was conjectured in 1972 by Françoise Dejean and proven in 2009 by Currie and Rampersad and, independently, by Rao.
In the study of strings, concatenation is seen as analogous to multiplication of numbers. For instance, if
s
ss
s
s
s2
s
\ell
e
n/\ell
se
n
sssss...
A square-free word is a string that does not contain any square as a substring. In particular, it avoids repeating the same symbol consecutively, repeating the same pair of symbols, etc. Axel Thue showed that there exists an infinite square-free word using a three-symbol alphabet, the sequence of differences between consecutive elements of the Thue–Morse sequence. However, it is not possible for an infinite two-symbol word (or even a two-symbol word of length greater than three) to be square-free.
For alphabets of two symbols, however, there do exist infinite cube-free words,words with no substring of the form
sss
In 1972, Dejean investigated the problem of determining, for each possible alphabet size, the threshold between exponents
e
e
Let
k
k
\operatorname{RT}(k)
e
e
k
\operatorname{RT}(2)=2
\operatorname{RT}(k)
k
Then Dejean's conjecture is that the repeat threshold can be calculated by the simple formula
\operatorname{RT}(k)= | k |
k-1 |
\operatorname{RT}(3)= | 7 |
4 |
\operatorname{RT}(4)= | 7 |
5 |
.
Dejean herself proved the conjecture for
k=3
k=4
k\le11
k\le14
In the other direction, also in 2007, Arturo Carpi showed the conjecture to be true for large alphabets, with
k\ge33
An infinite string that meets Dejean's formula (having no repetitions of exponent above the repetition threshold) is called a Dejean word.Thus, for instance, the Thue–Morse sequence is a Dejean word.