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Only neighbors in the same row or column are considered. Given a matrix , let
be the maximum difference between two neighboring entries of
. Given integers
, let
be the smallest possible value of
among all
matrices
with different integer entries. Thus the conjecture asserts that
.
Consider the matrix
defined by
. The entries of
is
and
. Thus
. Consequently the conjecture is equivalent to the assertion
.
It can be easily seen that for any matrix
with different integer entries, there exists a matrix
with the entries
such that
. Therefore, in the definition of
, we may assume that the entries of each matrix is
. Consequently the conjecture reduces to the case when the entries of the matrix is
.
I have proved the conjecture for . The proof is separate for each of the 4 cases
and pretty elementary. However, I am not so sure at the moment whether the conjecture is true for all
. If it turns out to be generally false, it would be an interesting problem to evaluate
. I wonder if there are any related results.
Bibliography
* indicates original appearance(s) of problem.