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typo sphere
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F. C.
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McMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere"sphere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

Edit: The preprint arXiv:1812.10454 from Adiprasito gives a proof of the $g$-conjecture. So, this makes the question here less relevant :)

McMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

Edit: The preprint arXiv:1812.10454 from Adiprasito gives a proof of the $g$-conjecture. So, this makes the question here less relevant :)

McMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-sphere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

Edit: The preprint arXiv:1812.10454 from Adiprasito gives a proof of the $g$-conjecture. So, this makes the question here less relevant :)

Fixed link, added new reference
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John Machacek
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McMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphereSimplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

Edit: The preprint arXiv:1812.10454 from Adiprasito gives a proof of the $g$-conjecture. So, this makes the question here less relevant :)

McMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

McMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

Edit: The preprint arXiv:1812.10454 from Adiprasito gives a proof of the $g$-conjecture. So, this makes the question here less relevant :)

typo in name
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John Machacek
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MucMullen'sMcMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

MucMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

McMullen's $g$-conjecture aims the classify possible $f$-vectors of simplicial $d$-spheres. The $g$-conjecture has been proven for polytopal spheres and for simplicial spheres of dimension $d < 5$. I am wondering what computer searches have been done to verify (if you are an optimist) or search for counter examples (if you are a pessimist) of the $g$-conjecture.

The only attempt I know of was by Björner and Lutz and was reported in the paper Simplicial manifolds, bistellar flips and a 16-vertex triangulation of the Poincaré homology 3-sphere from 2000. Here it appears Björner and Lutz looked at some (non-PL) simplicial spheres of dimension $d = 5,6$.

I am curious if there have been any more attempts since 2000, and (perhaps too ambitiously) if anyone has been able to make a statement like:

The $g$-conjecture holds for all simplicial $d$-spheres with at most $n$ vertices.

for some nontrivial $d$ and $n$. Of course one could replace "simplicial $d$-shpere" with some class between simplicial spheres and polytopal spheres and that would also be interesting.

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John Machacek
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