The n-Queens Problem in Higher Dimensions
read the original abstract
A well-known chessboard problem is that of placing eight queens on the chessboard so that no two queens are able to attack each other. (Recall that a queen can attack anything on the same row, column, or diagonal as itself.) This problem is known to have been studied by Gauss, and can be generalized to an (n \times n) board, where (n \geq 4). We consider this problem in $d$-dimensional chess spaces, where (d \geq 3), and obtain the result that in higher dimensions, $n$ queens do not always suffice (in any arrangement) to attack all board positions. Our methods allow us to obtain the first lower bound on the number of queens that are necessary to attack all positions in a $d$-dimensional chess space of size $n$, and further to show that for any $k$, there are higher-dimensional chess spaces in which not all positions can be attacked by (n^k) queens.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
On the Structure of 3D Queen Domination
The domination number of the 3D n x n x n queen graph is Theta(n squared), established via stratified domination counts per position type and octahedral symmetry reduction.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.