The Apparent Structure of Dense Sidon Sets

The correspondence between perfect difference sets and transitive projective planes is well-known. We observe that all known dense (i.e., close to square-root size) Sidon subsets of abelian groups come from projective planes through a similar construction. We classify the Sidon sets arising in this...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Electronic journal of combinatorics Vol. 30; no. 1
Main Authors Eberhard, Sean, Manners, Freddie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 24.02.2023
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Summary:The correspondence between perfect difference sets and transitive projective planes is well-known. We observe that all known dense (i.e., close to square-root size) Sidon subsets of abelian groups come from projective planes through a similar construction. We classify the Sidon sets arising in this manner from desarguesian planes and find essentially no new examples. There are many further examples arising from nondesarguesian planes. We conjecture that all dense Sidon sets arise from finite projective planes in this way. If true, this implies that all abelian groups of most orders do not have dense Sidon subsets. In particular if $\sigma_n$ denotes the size of the largest Sidon subset of $\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z}$, this implies $\liminf_{n \to \infty} \sigma_n / n^{1/2} < 1$. We also give a brief bestiary of somewhat smaller Sidon sets with a variety of algebraic origins, and for some of them provide an overarching pattern.
ISSN:1077-8926
1077-8926
DOI:10.37236/11191