ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Let P and Q be convex polyhedra in E3 with face lattices F(P) and F(Q) and symmetry groups G(P) and G(Q), respectively. Then, P and Q are called face equivalent if there is a lattice isomorphism between F(P) and F(Q); P and Q are called symmetry equivalent if the action of G(P) on F(P) is equivalent to the action of G(Q) on F(Q). It is well known that the set [P] of all polyhedra which are face equivalent to P has the structure of a manifold of dimension {e-1}, up to similarities, where e=e(P) is the number of edges of P. This is a consequence of the Steinitzs classical Theorem. We give a new proof of this fact. The symmetry type of P denoted by <P> is the set of all polyhedron Q symmetry equivalent to P. We show that for polyhedra with symmetry group G(P) a reflection group the dimension of this manifold is {O-1} where O is the number of edge orbits of P under and the action of G(P) on F(P).
A spectral convex set is a collection of symmetric matrices whose range of eigenvalues form a symmetric convex set. Spectral convex sets generalize the Schur-Horn orbitopes studied by Sanyal-Sottile-Sturmfels (2011). We study this class of convex bod
A hyperbolic 3-simplex reflection group is a Coxeter group arising as a lattice in the isometry group of hyperbolic 3-space, with fundamental domain a geodesic simplex (possibly with some ideal vertices). The classification of these groups is known,
Given a convex polyhedral surface P, we define a tailoring as excising from P a simple polygonal domain that contains one vertex v, and whose boundary can be sutured closed to a new convex polyhedron via Alexandrovs Gluing Theorem. In particular, a d
We describe a simple locally CAT(0) classifying space for extra extra large type Artin groups (with all labels at least 5). Furthermore, when the Artin group is not dihedral, we describe a rank 1 periodic geodesic, thus proving that extra large type
Robertson (1988) suggested a model for the realization space of a convex d-dimensional polytope and an approach via the implicit function theorem, which -- in the case of a full rank Jacobian -- proves that the realization space is a manifold of dime