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Monskys celebrated equidissection theorem follows from his more general proof of the existence of a polynomial relation $f$ among the areas of the triangles in a dissection of the unit square. More recently, the authors studied a different polynomial $p$, also a relation among the areas of the triangles in such a dissection, that is invariant under certain deformations of the dissection. In this paper we study the relationship between these two polynomials. We first generalize the notion of dissection, allowing triangles whose orientation differs from that of the plane. We define a deformation space of these generalized dissections and we show that this space is an irreducible algebraic variety. We then extend the theorem of Monsky to the context of generalized dissections, showing that Monskys polynomial $f$ can be chosen to be invariant under deformation. Although $f$ is not uniquely defined, the interplay between $p$ and $f$ then allows us to identify a canonical pair of choices for the polynomial $f$. In many cases, all of the coefficients of the canonical $f$ polynomials are positive. We also use the deformation-invariance of $f$ to prove that the polynomial $p$ is congruent modulo 2 to a power of the sum of its variables.
In 1940, Luis Santalo proved a Helly-type theorem for line transversals to boxes in R^d. An analysis of his proof reveals a convexity structure for ascending lines in R^d that is isomorphic to the ordinary notion of convexity in a convex subset of R^
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Monskys theorem from 1970 states that a square cannot be dissected into an odd number of triangles of the same area, but it does not give a lower bound for the area differences that must occur. We extend Monskys theorem to constrained framed maps;
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