The N + k Queens Problem Page

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Background

The More-than-N-Queens Problem

In 1848, Max Bezzel first posed the Eight Queens Problem: Place eight queens on a chessboard so that no two queens attack each other. This problem was generalized in 1869 to the N-Queens problem (N mutually non-attacking queens on an N-by-N chessboard).

In 1995, Michael Anshel of the City University of New York presented the following problem to an Artificial Intelligence seminar : if we remove some of the squares of the chessboard, can we place more than N queens on the "partial chessboard" that remains? In 1998, Anshel's student, Kaiyan Zhao, defended her doctoral thesis entitled "The Combinatorics of Chessboards," which considered "The Queens Problem on a Partial Chessboard". Among other things, Zhao proved that three pawns are necessary and sufficient to allow six nonattacking queens on a five-by-five board.

The "Nine Queens Problem" Contest

In 2004, the Chess Variant Pages sponsored a contest that posed the following question (credited to Wim Henk Boedlander): We can put nine mutually non-attacking queens on an eight-by-eight board if we put some pawns on the board to block queen attacks. How few pawns are necessary? The answer turns out to be 1, as you can see in the picture below. The Nine Queens Problem contest can be found at http://www.chessvariants.org/problems.dir/9queens.html .

Nine queens and a pawn on a chessboard. Pawn at d5, Queens at a8,b5,c2,d4,d6,e1,f7,g5,h3

One Extra Queen

The contest participants soon asked about generalizations, such as "How many pawns would it take on a larger board?" It turns out that for N > 5, we need to put only one pawn on the board in order to allow us to place N+1 nonattacking queens on the board. For more details, see http://people.moreheadstate.edu/fs/d.chatham/queenssep.pdf.

Many Extra Queens

More generally, we can prove the following theorem: for each k > 0, if N is large enough we can place N + k queens and k pawns on an N-by-N board so that none of the queens attack each other. For more details on that proof, see http://people.moreheadstate.edu/fs/d.chatham/QueensSep2.pdf .

Open Problems

Here is a partial list of unsolved problems related to the N+k Queens Problem:

Some partial answers are available in the papers placed on this site.

Resources and Links

Talks

Here are slides from some of our talks related to this subject:

Papers

Here are preprints of papers we've written:

Pictures

If you want to see some solutions to the N+k Queens Problem, look at the following files:

Programs

Here are some recreational scripts involving the N+k Queens Problem:

Solution Counts

If you want the number of solutions to the N+k Queens Problem for certain small N and k, try one of these links:

Outside Pages

Here are outside websites on matters related to the N + k Queens Problem:

Contact Info and Acknowledgements

Contact: Doug Chatham at d.chatham@moreheadstate.edu

Thanks to the colleagues who have collaborated in this research, including Robin Blankenship, Maureen Doyle, Gerd Fricke, Duane Skaggs, and Jeff Ward. Thanks also to the students who have assisted us, including Kelly Gripshover, Craig Hamilton, Joe Harless, Casey Hufford, John Miller, Jon Reitmann, Amber Rogers, Brian Salyer, Luke Thompson, Nick Wahle, and Matt Wolff.

The research described in this website was partially supported by NSF KY-EPSCoR Research Enhancement Grant UKRF 3046884400-07-419, NASA KY-EPSCoR grant NCC5-571, Morehead State University Faculty Research Grant 225229, and many MSU Undergraduate Research Fellowships.

The graphics on this page were generated by CVP Game Courier.


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Page last updated: August 9, 2008