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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Independence problem  





2 Domination problems  





3 Piece tour problems  





4 Chess swap problems  





5 See also  





6 Notes  





7 References  





8 External links  














Mathematical chess problem






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Amathematical chess problem is a mathematical problem which is formulated using a chessboard and chess pieces. These problems belong to recreational mathematics. The most well-known problems of this kind are the eight queens puzzle and the knight's tour problem, which have connection to graph theory and combinatorics. Many famous mathematicians studied mathematical chess problems, such as, Thabit, Euler, Legendre and Gauss.[1] Besides finding a solution to a particular problem, mathematicians are usually interested in counting the total number of possible solutions, finding solutions with certain properties, as well as generalization of the problems to N×N or M×N boards.

Independence problem

[edit]

Anindependence problem (orunguard[citation needed]) is a problem in which, given a certain type of chess piece (queen, rook, bishop, knight or king), one must find the maximum number that can be placed on a chessboard so that none of the pieces attack each other. It is also required that an actual arrangement for this maximum number of pieces be found. The most famous problem of this type is the eight queens puzzle. Problems are further extended by asking how many possible solutions exist. Further generalizations apply the problem to NxN boards.[2][3]

An 8×8 chessboard can have 16 independent kings, 8 independent queens, 8 independent rooks, 14 independent bishops, or 32 independent knights.[4] Solutions for kings, bishops, queens and knights are shown below. To get 8 independent rooks is sufficient to place them on one of main diagonals.

abcdefgh
8

a7 white king

c7 white king

e7 white king

g7 white king

a5 white king

c5 white king

e5 white king

g5 white king

a3 white king

c3 white king

e3 white king

g3 white king

a1 white king

c1 white king

e1 white king

g1 white king

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
16 independent kings
abcdefgh
8

f8 white queen

d7 white queen

g6 white queen

a5 white queen

h4 white queen

b3 white queen

e2 white queen

c1 white queen

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
8 independent queens
abcdefgh
8

h8 white rook

g7 white rook

f6 white rook

e5 white rook

d4 white rook

c3 white rook

b2 white rook

a1 white rook

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
8 independent rooks
abcdefgh
8

b8 white bishop

c8 white bishop

d8 white bishop

e8 white bishop

f8 white bishop

g8 white bishop

a1 white bishop

b1 white bishop

c1 white bishop

d1 white bishop

e1 white bishop

f1 white bishop

g1 white bishop

h1 white bishop

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
14 independent bishops
abcdefgh
8

b8 white knight

d8 white knight

f8 white knight

h8 white knight

a7 white knight

c7 white knight

e7 white knight

g7 white knight

b6 white knight

d6 white knight

f6 white knight

h6 white knight

a5 white knight

c5 white knight

e5 white knight

g5 white knight

b4 white knight

d4 white knight

f4 white knight

h4 white knight

a3 white knight

c3 white knight

e3 white knight

g3 white knight

b2 white knight

d2 white knight

f2 white knight

h2 white knight

a1 white knight

c1 white knight

e1 white knight

g1 white knight

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
32 independent knights

Domination problems

[edit]

Adomination (orcovering) problem involves finding the minimum number of pieces of the given kind to place on a chessboard such that all vacant squares are attacked at least once. It is a special case of the vertex cover problem. The minimum number of dominating kings is 9, queens is 5, rooks is 8, bishops is 8, and knights is 12. To get 8 dominating rooks, it is sufficient to place one on each file. Solutions for other pieces are provided on diagrams below.

abcdefgh
8

b8 white king

e8 white king

h8 white king

b5 white king

e5 white king

h5 white king

b2 white king

e2 white king

h2 white king

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
9 dominating kings
abcdefgh
8

f7 white queen

c6 white queen

e5 white queen

g4 white queen

d3 white queen

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
5 dominating queens
abcdefgh
8

d8 white bishop

d7 white bishop

d6 white bishop

d5 white bishop

d4 white bishop

d3 white bishop

d2 white bishop

d1 white bishop

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
8 dominating bishops
abcdefgh
8

f7 white knight

b6 white knight

c6 white knight

e6 white knight

f6 white knight

c5 white knight

f4 white knight

c3 white knight

d3 white knight

f3 white knight

g3 white knight

c2 white knight

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
12 dominating knights

The domination problems are also sometimes formulated as requiring one to find the minimal number of pieces needed to attack all squares on the board, including occupied ones.[5] For rooks, eight are required; the solution is to place them all on one file or rank. The solutions for other pieces are given below.

abcdefgh
8

b7 white king

e7 white king

h7 white king

b6 white king

e6 white king

h6 white king

b3 white king

e3 white king

h3 white king

b2 white king

e2 white king

h2 white king

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
12 kings attack all squares
abcdefgh
8

g8 white queen

e6 white queen

d5 white queen

c4 white queen

a2 white queen

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
5 queens attack all squares
abcdefgh
8

b6 white bishop

d6 white bishop

e6 white bishop

g6 white bishop

c4 white bishop

d4 white bishop

e4 white bishop

f4 white bishop

c2 white bishop

f2 white bishop

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
10 bishops attacking all squares
abcdefgh
8

c7 white knight

e7 white knight

f7 white knight

c6 white knight

e6 white knight

c5 white knight

g5 white knight

c4 white knight

e4 white knight

b3 white knight

c3 white knight

e3 white knight

f3 white knight

g3 white knight

8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
14 knights attacking all squares

Domination by queens on the main diagonal of a chessboard of any size can be shown equivalent to a problem in number theory of finding a Salem–Spencer set, a set of numbers in which none of the numbers is the average of two others. The optimal placement of queens is obtained by leaving vacant a set of squares that all have the same parity (all are in even positions or all in odd positions along the diagonal) and that form a Salem–Spencer set.[6]

Piece tour problems

[edit]

These kinds of problems ask to find a tour of certain chess piece, which visits all squares on a chess board. The most known problem of this kind is Knight's Tour. Besides the knight, such tours exists for king, queen and rook. Bishops are unable to reach each square on the board, so the problem for them is formulated to reach all squares of one color.[7]

Chess swap problems

[edit]

In chess swap problems, the whites pieces swap with the black pieces.[8] This is done with the pieces' normal legal moves during a game, but alternating turns is not required. For example, a white knight can move twice in a row. Capturing pieces is not allowed. Two such problems are shown below. In the first one the goal is to exchange the positions of white and black knights. In the second one the positions of bishops must be exchanged with an additional limitation, that enemy pieces do not attack each other.

a4 black knightb4 black knightc4 black knightd4 black knight
a3 black knightb3 black knightc3d3 black knight
a2 white knightb2c2 white knightd2 white knight
a1 white knightb1 white knightc1 white knightd1 white knight
Knight swap puzzle
a5 black bishopb5 black bishopc5 black bishopd5 black bishop
a4b4c4d4
a3b3c3d3
a2b2c2d2
a1 white bishopb1 white bishopc1 white bishopd1 white bishop
Bishop swap puzzle

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Gik, p.11
  • ^ "Independent Pieces tour!". Lichess. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  • ^ "mathrecreation: Mathematical Chessboard Puzzles". mathrecreation. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
  • ^ Gik, p.98
  • ^ Gik, p.101.
  • ^ Cockayne, E. J.; Hedetniemi, S. T. (1986), "On the diagonal queens domination problem", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, 42 (1): 137–139, doi:10.1016/0097-3165(86)90012-9, MR 0843468
  • ^ Gik, p. 87
  • ^ "Knight swap puzzle - Chess Forums".
  • References

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    This page was last edited on 9 July 2022, at 06:03 (UTC).

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