Three-dimensional pseudomanifolds on eight vertices (Q954830): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Created claim: Wikidata QID (P12): Q58645436, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1707149277123 |
Removed claim: reviewed by (P1447): Item:Q1163256 |
||
Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Wolfgang Kuehnel / rank | |||
Revision as of 11:21, 22 February 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Three-dimensional pseudomanifolds on eight vertices |
scientific article |
Statements
Three-dimensional pseudomanifolds on eight vertices (English)
0 references
18 November 2008
0 references
This paper gives a classification of all combinatorial 3-pseudomanifolds (in the strong sense) with 8 vertices. There are exactly 35 items with at least one singular vertex, up to combinatorial automorphisms. It was previously known that there are exactly 39 distinct combinatorial types of 3-manifolds with 8 vertices and that all of them are spheres (37 polytopal and 2 non-polytopal ones). The work of the authors is based on a classification of the possible vertex links which must be triangulated surfaces with at most 7 vertices. The topological types of these 3-pseudomanifolds are almost completely classified. Some of them are branched quotients of triangulated 3-manifolds. Most of them are (topologically) suspensions of \(\mathbb{R} P^2\). One of the cases contains all \(8\choose 3\) triangles, each vertex link is the unique 7-vertex torus. In combinatorics this object was observed by A. Emch in 1929 as a 2-fold quadruple system or block design \(S_2(3,4;8)\).
0 references
branched covering
0 references
regular triangulation neighborly triangulation
0 references
suspension
0 references