On the number of arrangements of pseudolines (Q1380817): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Added link to MaRDI item.
RedirectionBot (talk | contribs)
Removed claim: author (P16): Item:Q170482
Property / author
 
Property / author: Stefan Felsner / rank
Normal rank
 

Revision as of 09:18, 10 February 2024

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
On the number of arrangements of pseudolines
scientific article

    Statements

    On the number of arrangements of pseudolines (English)
    0 references
    8 July 1998
    0 references
    An \(x\)-monotone curve in Euclidean plane is called a pseudoline. An arrangement of pseudolines is a family of pseudolines with the following properties: (i) each pair of pseudolines has a unique point of intersection where the pseudolines cross, and (ii) no 3 pseudolines have a common point of intersection. Two arrangements are considered isomorphic, if their face lattices are isomorphic by re-labelling the pseudolines. The major contribution of the paper is an improved upper bound for the number of arrangements of \(n\) pseudolines, \(2^{. 6974n^2}\). As a byproduct, it turns out that the maximal number of halving lines of 10 points in the plane is 13. The main tool to achieve this bound is the following encoding. Associate with line \(i\) a permutation \(\sigma_i= (\sigma^i_1, \sigma^i_2, \dots, \sigma^i_{n-1})\) of \(\{1,2, \dots, i,\dots, n\}\) which tells the order of other lines as they cross \(i\). The vector \((\sigma_1, \sigma_2, \dots, \sigma_n)\) is known as an encoding of the arrangement. The paper shows that, for \(\tau^i_j=1\) if \(\sigma^i_j>i\) and \(\tau^i_j=0\) otherwise, and \(\tau_i= (\tau^i_1, \tau^i_2, \dots, \tau^i_{n-1})\), the vector \((\tau_1, \tau_2, \dots, \tau_n)\) is already an encoding.
    0 references
    topological sweep
    0 references
    pseudoline
    0 references
    arrangement
    0 references
    face lattices
    0 references
    encoding
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references