4 research outputs found
Irreducible triangulations of surfaces with boundary
A triangulation of a surface is irreducible if no edge can be contracted to
produce a triangulation of the same surface. In this paper, we investigate
irreducible triangulations of surfaces with boundary. We prove that the number
of vertices of an irreducible triangulation of a (possibly non-orientable)
surface of genus g>=0 with b>=0 boundaries is O(g+b). So far, the result was
known only for surfaces without boundary (b=0). While our technique yields a
worse constant in the O(.) notation, the present proof is elementary, and
simpler than the previous ones in the case of surfaces without boundary
Generating families of surface triangulations. The case of punctured surfaces with inner degree at least 4
We present two versions of a method for generating all triangulations of any
punctured surface in each of these two families: (1) triangulations with inner
vertices of degree at least 4 and boundary vertices of degree at least 3 and
(2) triangulations with all vertices of degree at least 4. The method is based
on a series of reversible operations, termed reductions, which lead to a
minimal set of triangulations in each family. Throughout the process the
triangulations remain within the corresponding family. Moreover, for the family
(1) these operations reduce to the well-known edge contractions and removals of
octahedra. The main results are proved by an exhaustive analysis of all
possible local configurations which admit a reduction.Comment: This work has been partially supported by PAI FQM-164; PAI FQM-189;
MTM 2010-2044