Smooth centrally symmetric polytopes in dimension 3 are IDP (Q2003726): Difference between revisions
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English | Smooth centrally symmetric polytopes in dimension 3 are IDP |
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Smooth centrally symmetric polytopes in dimension 3 are IDP (English)
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9 July 2019
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A lattice polytope \(P\) in \(\mathbb{R}^d\) is the convex hull of finitely many points in the integer lattice \(\mathbb{Z}^d\). \(P\) is called an IDP polytope (has the Integer Decomposition Property) if for every integer \(n \geq 1\) and every lattice point \(p \in nP \cap \mathbb{Z}^d\), there are lattice points \(p_1,\ldots, p_n \in P\cap \mathbb{Z}^d\) such that \(p = p_1+\cdots+p_n\). Some examples of IDP polytopes are unimodular simplices, parallelepipeds, and zonotopes. Now, a lattice polytope \(P\) is smooth if it is simple and if its primitive edge directions at every vertex form a basis of the lattice \((\operatorname{aff} P) \cap \mathbb{Z}^d\). In [``Problems on Minkowski sums of convex lattice polytopes'', Preprint, \url{arXiv:0812.1418}], \textit{T. Oda} raised the question: Is every smooth lattice polytope IDP? The goal of this note is to show that this is true for every centrally symmetric 3-dimensional smooth polytope. The proof consist of cover \(P\) in a suitable way by unimodular simplices and parallelepipeds.
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smooth lattice polytopes
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integer decomposition property (IDP)
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central symmetry
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3-dimensional polytopes
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