Hobby–Rice theorem

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Template:Short description In mathematics, and in particular the necklace splitting problem, the Hobby–Rice theorem is a result that is useful in establishing the existence of certain solutions. It was proved in 1965 by Charles R. Hobby and John R. Rice;[1] a simplified proof was given in 1976 by A. Pinkus.[2]

The theorem

Define a partition of the interval [0,1] as a division of the interval into n+1 subintervals by as an increasing sequence of n numbers:

0=z0<z1<<zn<zn+1=1

Define a signed partition as a partition in which each subinterval i has an associated sign δi:

δ1,,δk+1{+1,1}

The Hobby–Rice theorem says that for every n continuously integrable functions:

g1,,gn:[0,1]

there exists a signed partition of [0,1] such that:

i=1n+1δizi1zigj(z)dz=0 for 1jn.

(in other words: for each of the n functions, its integral over the positive subintervals equals its integral over the negative subintervals).

Application to fair division

The theorem was used by Noga Alon in the context of necklace splitting[3] in 1987.

Suppose the interval [0,1] is a cake. There are n partners and each of the n functions is a value-density function of one partner. We want to divide the cake into two parts such that all partners agree that the parts have the same value. This fair-division challenge is sometimes referred to as the consensus-halving problem.[4] The Hobby–Rice theorem implies that this can be done with n cuts.

References

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