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Normaliz is an open-source software for the computation of lattice points in rational polyhedra, or, in a different language, the solutions of linear diophantine systems. The two main computational goals are (i) finding a system of generators of the set of lattice points and (ii) counting elements degree-wise in a generating function, the Hilbert Series. In the homogeneous case, in which the polyhedron is a cone, the set of generators is the Hilbert basis of the intersection of the cone and the lattice, an affine monoid. We will present some improvements to the Normaliz algorithm by subdividing simplicial cones with huge volumes. In the first approach the subdivision points are found by integer programming techniques. For this purpose we interface to the integer programming solver SCIP to our software. In the second approach we try to find good subdivision points in an approximating overcone that is faster to compute.
In this article we describe mathematically relevant extensions to Normaliz that were added to it during the support by the DFG SPP Algorithmische und Experimentelle Methoden in Algebra, Geometrie und Zahlentheorie: nonpointed cones, rational polyhedr
The subdivision graph $mathcal{S}(G)$ of a graph $G$ is the graph obtained by inserting a new vertex into every edge of $G$. Let $G_1$ and $G_2$ be two vertex disjoint graphs. The emph{subdivision-vertex corona} of $G_1$ and $G_2$, denoted by $G_1odo
We show that the size of the largest simple d-cycle in a simplicial d-complex $K$ is at least a square root of $K$s density. This generalizes a well-known classical result of ErdH{o}s and Gallai cite{EG59} for graphs. We use methods from matroid theory applied to combinatorial simplicial complexes.
Let $X$ be a simplicial complex on $n$ vertices without missing faces of dimension larger than $d$. Let $L_{j}$ denote the $j$-Laplacian acting on real $j$-cochains of $X$ and let $mu_{j}(X)$ denote its minimal eigenvalue. We study the connection bet
The subdivision graph $mathcal{S}(G)$ of a graph $G$ is the graph obtained by inserting a new vertex into every edge of $G$. Let $G_1$ and $G_2$ be two vertex disjoint graphs. The emph{subdivision-vertex join} of $G_1$ and $G_2$, denoted by $G_1dot{v