Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Pigeonhole Principle

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Pigeonhole Principle"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Pigeonhole Principle

2 Example 1 In a room of 13 people, 2 or more people have their birthday in the same month. Proof: (by contradiction) 1. Assume the room has 13 people and no 2 people have their birthday in the same month. 2. There must be at least 13 different months. 3. Statement 2. is false, so the assumption is false.

3 Example 2 If 41 balls are chosen from a set of red, white, blue, garnet, and gold colored balls, then at least 12 red balls, 15 white balls, 4 blue, 10 garnet, or 4 gold balls chosen. Proof by contradiction: (use DeMorgan’s law) 1. Assume that 41 balls are chosen from this set and that at most 11 red, 14 white, 3 blue, 9 garnet, and 3 gold balls are chosen. 2. At most 40 balls were chosen, a contradiction.

4 The pigeonhole principle
Let m1, m2, … , mn be positive integers. If m1 + m mn - n + 1 objects are put into n boxes, Then either the 1st box has at least m1, or the 2nd box has at least m2, or …, or the nth box has at least mn objects.

5 Proof by Contradiction
Assume m1 + m mn - n + 1 objects are put into n boxes, and the 1st box has at most m1 - 1, and the 2nd box has at most m2 - 1, and …, and the nth box has at most mn - 1 objects. Then, at most m1 + m mn - n objects are in the boxes, a contradiction.

6 Another Form of Pigeonhole Principle
If A is the average number of pigeons/hole, then some hole contains at least A pigeons and some hole contains at most A pigeons.

7 Intuition A A A Cannot have all holes contain less than the average. Cannot have all holes contain more than the average.

8 Proof of Alternate Principle
By contradiction: Assume A is the average number of pigeons/hole. Assume every hole contains at most A - 1 pigeons or every hole contains at least A + 1 pigeons. 3. Let n denote the number of holes. 4. Assume every hole contains at most A - 1 pigeons. 5. All holes contain at most n(A - 1 ) < nA pigeons, a contradiction.

9 5. Assume every hole contains at least A + 1 pigeons.
6. All holes contain at least n(A + 1) > nA pigeons, a contradiction. 7. Therefore, some hole contains at least A pigeons and some hole contains at most A pigeons.

10 Applications of pigeonhole principle
If n + 1 pigeons are distributed among n holes, then some hole contains at least 2 pigeons. If 2n + 1 pigeons are distributed among n holes, then some hole contains at least 3 pigeons. If kn + 1 pigeons are distributed among n holes, then some hole contains at least k + 1 pigeons. The average number of pigeons/hole = k + 1/n and  k + 1/n  = k + 1.

11 Applications ... In any group of 367 people, there must be at least 1 pair with the same birthday. If 4 different pairs of socks are scrambled in the drawer, only 5 socks need to be selected to guarantee finding a matching pair. In a group of 61 people, at least 6 were born in the same month.

12 Applications ... If 401 letters were delivered to 50 houses, then some house received at most 8 letters. If x1, x2, …, x8 are distinct integers, then some pair of these have the same remainder when divided by 7.

13 Applications ... Given a set of 7 distinct integers, there are 2 whose sum or difference is divisible by 10. Set this up so that there are 6 pigeon holes. Partitioning the integers into equivalence classes according to their remainder when divided by 10 yields too many classes. Consider: {[0]}, {[1],[9]}, {[2],[8]}, {[3],[7]}, {[4],[6]}, {[5]}. If 2 integers are in the same set either their difference is divisible by 10 or their sum is divisible by 10.

14 Applications ... Suppose Then,
50 chairs are arranged in a rectangular array of 5 rows and 10 columns. 41 students are seated randomly in the chairs (1 student/chair). Then, some row contains at least 9 students some row contains at most 8 students some column contains at least 5 students some column contains at most 4 students.

15 Applications ... A patient has 45 pills, with instructions to take at least 1 pill/day for 30 days. Prove: there is a period of consecutive days in which the patient takes a total of 14 pills. 1. Let ai be the number of pills taken through the end of the ith day. 2. 1  a1 < a2 < < a30  45. 3. a < a < < a  = 59

16 5. 2 of these integers must be the same.
4. We have: 60 integers: a1, a2 , , a30 , a1 +14, a2 +14 , , a30 +14 59 holes. 5. 2 of these integers must be the same. 6. They cannot both be in a1, a2 , , a30 . 7. They cannot both be in a1 +14, a2 +14 , , a 8. One is in each: ai = aj + 14, for some i and j. 9. For that i and j, ai - aj = 14. 10. That is, aj+1+aj ai = 14.


Download ppt "The Pigeonhole Principle"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google