Unshellable triangulations of spheres (Q1180799): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 13:50, 15 May 2024

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Unshellable triangulations of spheres
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    Unshellable triangulations of spheres (English)
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    27 June 1992
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    To shell a triangulated \(n\)-disk or \(n\)-sphere means to remove its \(n\)-simplices one by one so that after each step (except the last) a triangulated \(n\)-disk remains. It is easy to see that for \(n\leq 2\) every triangulation of the \(n\)-disk or the \(n\)-sphere can be shelled, and it has been generally known that for \(n\geq 3\) unshellable triangulations exist. But whereas explicit constructions of unshellable triangulations of disks have been available in the literature [\textit{M.-E. Rudin}, Bull. Am. Math. Soc. 64, 90--91 (1958; Zbl 0082.37602); \textit{R. H. Bing}, Lect. on Modern Math. 2, 93--128 (1964; Zbl 0126.39104); \textit{R. E. Goodrick}, Proc. Camb. Philos. Soc. 64, 31--36 (1968; Zbl 0179.52602)], those of spheres have apparently not been. In the present article the author proves that for each \(n\geq 3\) there exists a combinatorial triangulation of the \(n\)-sphere such that after removing any \(n\)-simplex from it we are left with a noncollapsible (and a fortiori unshellable) triangulation of the \(n\)-disk.
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    simplicial shelling
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    noncollapsible triangulation of the \(n\)-disk
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    combinatorial triangulation of the \(n\)-sphere
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