The Cycle Index Polynomial
When first attempting to solve the necklace problem, we noticed that certain patterns appear more than others amongst the colourings. Roughly speaking, the easier it was to spot a pattern in a colouring, the rarer the colouring. For example, RRRRRR appears only once, RGRGRG appears twice, while something like RGBRRB appears 12 times in various guises. Pólya captured the reason behind this, and found an elegant way to describe it. According to the Wikipedia, J. H. Redfield published it first, but was somehow overlooked.
Again we shall number the beads from 1 to 6. Rotations and reflections are permutations of the beads. The key to solving the problem is to study the cycle structure of these permutations. For example, the reflection taking 123456 to 654321 is the permutation which consists of 3 2-cycles. We can represent this by writing .
Observe a permutation has no effect on a colouring if and only if each cycle consists of beads of the same colour. For example, if 1 and 6 are both red, 2 and 5 are both green and 3 and 4 are both blue, then leaves the colouring unchanged. Conversely, if leaves a given colouring unchanged, 1 and 6 must be the same colour, and similarly for 2 and 5, and 3 and 4.
Thus there are exactly ways to colour 6 beads so that has no effect, so .
Another example: the rotation is the permutation . This has 2 3-cycles, which we write as to , and there are ways to colour 6 beads so that has no effect, so .
More generally, if is a permutation group on a set then the cycle index polynomial of is:
where is the number of cycles of length in the permutation . We omit when it is clear from context.
Thus, by Burnside’s Lemma, the number of necklaces with beads of colours is where is the dihedral group of order . More generally:
Theorem: (Pólya) Let be a permutation group on a set . Let be a set of size . Let be the set of all functions from to , and define a group action of on in the natural way. Then the number of orbits of acting on is
The 6 bead case is small enough to compute explicitly. We have the identity,
5 (nontrivial) rotations
and 6 reflections
giving
Then the number of different 6-bead necklaces where there are 3 kinds of beads is:
Cyclic, dihedral and symmetric groups
Some exercises. Show that the cyclic polynomial for:
…the cyclic group of order is:
…the symmetry group of an -gon for odd is:
…the symmetry group of an -gon for even is:
…the group of all permutations on objects is:
In particular, for a 10-bead necklace with 3 kinds of beads, we have the cycle index polynomial
and .