An intrinsic characterization of foldings of Euclidean space (Q1122779): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 04:38, 13 February 2024
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English | An intrinsic characterization of foldings of Euclidean space |
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An intrinsic characterization of foldings of Euclidean space (English)
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1989
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A folding shall be a non-expansive, piecewise isometric mapping \(q\colon \mathbb R^d\to \mathbb R^d\) with pieces forming a polyhedral decomposition of the space. As an illustration (not every folding on \(\mathbb R^2\) is a paper folding in the following sense), imagine that a piece of paper is folded several times, translated, flipped or rotated arbitrarily. Thus, a mapping \(q\colon \mathbb R^2\to \mathbb R^2\) is defined. In this way the plane is divided into (possibly unbounded) polygonal domains such that the restriction of \(q\) to each domain is an isometry. With respect to the edge-neighbouring relation, these domains (folds) can be two-colored, i.e. divided into two classes \(A\), \(B\). It is easy to see that at each vertex the angle-sum of polygons from \(A\) is equal to that from \(B\). The main topic of the paper is to show that this angle-sum property characterizes the class of foldings and that it generalizes to \(\mathbb R^d\).
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polyhedral complex
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angle-sum relations
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isometry
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