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Economic equilibrium and tropical geometry

There is a famous saying in economics: When everyone pursues his or her own interests, there is an invisible hand that brings the market to equilibrium. However, this is not always the case. Here is ...
Surpass2019's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
93 views

Minimal set of geometric moves in various equivalence classes of triangulated geometries

I would like to get to know what is the minimal set of geometric changes "aka. moves" (topology preserving modifications / Pachner moves / bistellar moves) that can transform any 3-...
Kregnach's user avatar
  • 183
3 votes
0 answers
60 views

Points of a centrally symmetric lattice polytope

Let $P\subseteq\mathbb R^n$ be a centrally symmetric lattice polytope whose only interior lattice point is the zero vector. Is it true that $P$ is equivalent (up to ${\rm GL}(n,\mathbb Z)$ + lattice ...
bog's user avatar
  • 351
8 votes
1 answer
381 views

A "polar dual" for projective varieties?

Given a projective variety $X$ (over $\mathbb{C}$, say) with an affine paving $X=\sqcup_i C_i$, one can construct a poset $P_X$ on the set of cells $\{C_i\}$ by saying $C_i \leq C_j$ whenever $C_i \...
Christian Gaetz's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
193 views

What breaks down in the theory of affine hyperplane arrangments?

It appears to me that there is a substantial amount of combinatorial algebra and geometry supporting the theory of central hyperplane arrangements (See Topics in Hyperplane Arrangements, Aguiar and ...
MadcowD's user avatar
  • 101
3 votes
0 answers
83 views

A weaker version of Randell Isotopy Theorem

I am studying a problem in hyperplane arrangement theory related to the homotopy type of the complement manifold of a certain class of hyperplane arrangements. In a well celebrated paper Richard ...
snaleimath's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
54 views

Lattice-isotopic essentialization of arrangements

I'm working on a problem related to $\textbf{Randell's isotopy theorem}$ for complex hyperplane arrangements. I have a question which seems quite obvious. However, I haven't found a rigorous proof ...
snaleimath's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
230 views

Toric morphism fiber and kernel dimensions

Given a morphism between two smooth toric varieties $f: X \rightarrow Y$, is the dimension of the kernel of $\mathrm{d}f$ at any point $p \in X$ equal to the dimension of the fiber at $f(p) \in Y$? ...
Qiao's user avatar
  • 1,719
3 votes
0 answers
137 views

What are the Voronoi cones in 4 variables?

Question: What are the top dimensional cones of the 2nd Voronoi decomposition of the space of positive definite forms in $4$ variables? The 2nd Voronoi decomposition of the cone of positive definite ...
Numma1Stunna's user avatar
11 votes
2 answers
910 views

Access to a preprint by D. N. Verma

Some work I am doing is connected with a sequence 1, 3, 40, 1225, 67956, $\dots$ which agrees with http://oeis.org/A012250 for all eight terms. The only useful information in OEIS on this sequence is ...
Richard Stanley's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
367 views

On the number of lines of given points

Hi all, I have a question Concerning Beck's theorem. I have read it from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beck%27s_theorem and I have two questions : I suppose Beck's theorem doesn't hold when instead ...
rose's user avatar
  • 1
4 votes
0 answers
168 views

A fast way to test whether a partial function can be extended to a chirotope of rank 3 ?

Hello, What is a fast way to test whether a partial function can be extended to a chirotope of rank 3 ? That is: I have a domain $E = \{1,...,n\}$ and a partial function $f: E^3 \to \{-1, 0, 1\}$ ...
Josephine's user avatar
  • 191
1 vote
0 answers
513 views

Maximal disjoint hyperplanes

Assume a set of $n^{r}$ points $X_{r} = \{ x_{1}, \cdots, x_{n^{r}} \}$ is given occupying a codimension $t^{r}$ subspace in $\mathbb{R}^{n^{r}}$. Let $M_{r}$ be the set of $t^{r}$-tuples of these ...
user16007's user avatar
  • 800
16 votes
3 answers
2k views

The Sylvester Gallai Theorem and Sections of Varieties with "Simple Topology".

The Sylvester-Gallai theorem asserts that for every collection of points in the plane, not all on a line, there is a line containing exactly two of the points. One high dimensional extension ...