3
$\begingroup$

I've run across a simplicial complex which, according to Sage, seems to have a very easily-described homology. However, proving this fact has been rather difficult.

Fix $s\ge 2$ (though I would be very interested if anyone has an answer that is only for $s=2$; feel free to just assume that if you like). The vertices of this simplicial complex are certain subsets of $[n] = \{1,2,\ldots,n\}$, where $n>s$ and faces are formed from sets of subsets that have nonempty intersection. Let $p$ be the largest prime not more than $n$. The complex $\Delta_{s,n}$ has the following properties:

  1. For all subsets $X\subseteq \{2,\ldots,n\}$ of size $s-1$, we have $\{1\}\cup X\in \Delta_{s,n}$. Denote by $S_1$ the set of all such $X$; $S_1$ is a simplex, since all of these sets contain $1$.
  2. The complementary set $S_2 = \Delta_{s,n}\setminus S_1$ is such that all of its elements contain $p$ but do not contain $1$. Furthermore, for any set of $s-1$ elements of $S_1$, there is some set in $S_2$ that intersects each of these $s-1$ elements (pairwise).

Computationally, it seems that all the reduced homology groups are zero except for the $(s-1)$st, which equals the free abelian group of rank ${n-2\choose s-1}$.

A guess at a basis in the case $s=2$. I'll write, for example, $12$ instead of $\{1,2\}$. We have $$\Delta_{s,n} = \{12, 13, 14, \ldots, 1n\} \cup S_2,$$ where every element in $S_2$ contains $p$ but not $1$. Of course, any $1$-cycle that is completely contained in either $S_1$ or $S_2$ is the boundary of a $2$-simplex. For every pair of integers $i$ and $j$ both not $1$, there is some element $X$ of $S_2$ that contains both $i$ and $j$, so that $[1i, 1j, X]$ is a $1$-cycle in the simplicial complex without an interior (since $1i \cap 1j = 1$ and $1\notin X$). Lastly, if we take two sets $X$ and $Y$ in $S_2$ and there exists some $i$ such that $1i\cap X$ and $1i\cap Y$ are both nonempty, then it follows that $i\in X$ and $i\in Y$, so this $1$-cycle is the boundary of a $2$-simplex. What we have just shown is that the only $1$-cycles that are not the boundary of a $2$-simplex have two endpoints in $S_1$ and one endpoint in $S_2$.

For any pair of integers $(i,j)$, let $f(i,j)$ be some element in $S_2$ that contains both $i$ and $j$ (if there are multiple choices, just pick one). From here, my guess at a basis of the first homology group is the following: $$\eqalign{ [13, f(2,3)] - [12, f(2,3)] + [13, f(2,3)],\quad [14, f(2,4)] - [12, f(2,4)] + [14, f(2,4)],\cr [15, f(2,5)] - [12, f(2,5)] + [15, f(2,5)], \ldots [1n, f(2,n)] - [12, f(2,n)] + [1n, f(2,n)].\cr }$$ If this were correct, then there would be $n-2 = {n-2\choose 2-1}$ elements in the basis. Then we need to prove that the other reduced homology groups are zero, which shouldn't be as difficult. But I do not see any obvious way to show that this basis is spanning and minimally so, and I have heard that anytime you're doing explicit homology computations with elements in this way, you're probably barking up the wrong tree, so I would be grateful if anyone had any pointers or alternative approaches!

Edit. I believe I have something resembling a proof in the case $s=2$ using Mayer-Vietoris sequences, but I would really appreciate if someone could check it, as it is my first time using this theorem. So the version I saw looks like this: $$\cdots \to \tilde H_1(A\cap B) \to \tilde H_1(A)\oplus \tilde H_1(B) \to \tilde H_1(X)\to \tilde H_0(A\cap B) \to \tilde H_0(A)\oplus \tilde H_0(B) \to \tilde H_0(X)\to 0$$ Where $A$ and $B$ are such that $A\cup B =X$. What I thought to do was to make $A$ the simplex consisting of everything that contains $1$, and then $B$ everything else (another simplex with lots of little $1$-cells and $2$-cells sticking out). Importantly, $B$ does not have any $1$-cycles that are not the boundary of a $2$-simplex, since any such $1$-cycle must have two vertices in $A$. So $A$ and $B$ are both contractible. Now $A\cap B$ consists of the disjoint union of $n-1$ points, so $\tilde H_0(A\cap B) = {\bf Z}^{n-2}$. And putting this all together, we find that $$\cdots \to 0\to 0\to \tilde H_1(\Delta_{2,n}) \to {\bf Z}^{n-2} \to 0\to 0\to 0,$$ from which we conclude that $\tilde H_1(\Delta_{2,n}) = {\bf Z}^{n-2}$. Does this proof check out or have I made some error somewhere? I know this post has been a bit messy, so thanks for your time if you have made it to the end here!

$\endgroup$
5
  • $\begingroup$ Does the fact that $p$ is prime play any role? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 22, 2022 at 0:23
  • $\begingroup$ @MarianoSuárez-Álvarez So far, I have not seen this fact play any importance other than the fact that it causes $S_2$ to be a simplex and that it is different from $1$. But I thought I would mention that it is prime, just because that is what the computer spit out. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 22, 2022 at 0:33
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ This sort of problem seems like it might be approachable via discrete Morse theory (see, e.g., Foreman's introduction, especially Section 6). The game, more or less, is that you can use certain partial matchings on the faces of your complex to find a smaller complex with the same homotopy type. $\endgroup$
    – Alex Lazar
    Commented Jun 24, 2022 at 8:05
  • $\begingroup$ Oops, that should be "Forman". $\endgroup$
    – Alex Lazar
    Commented Jun 25, 2022 at 13:14
  • $\begingroup$ @AlexLazar Thanks for this reference! I looked through it and I think formalizing my "simplices contract down to points and faces can be counted a certain way" step could be done with discrete Morse theory! I should definitely look into it $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 27, 2022 at 22:47

0

You must log in to answer this question.

Browse other questions tagged .