788 research outputs found
Reconstructing a Simple Polytope from its Graph
Blind and Mani (1987) proved that the entire combinatorial structure (the
vertex-facet incidences) of a simple convex polytope is determined by its
abstract graph. Their proof is not constructive. Kalai (1988) found a short,
elegant, and algorithmic proof of that result. However, his algorithm has
always exponential running time. We show that the problem to reconstruct the
vertex-facet incidences of a simple polytope P from its graph can be formulated
as a combinatorial optimization problem that is strongly dual to the problem of
finding an abstract objective function on P (i.e., a shelling order of the
facets of the dual polytope of P). Thereby, we derive polynomial certificates
for both the vertex-facet incidences as well as for the abstract objective
functions in terms of the graph of P. The paper is a variation on joint work
with Michael Joswig and Friederike Koerner (2001).Comment: 14 page
Recommended from our members
Hypernetworks for reconstructing the dynamics of multilevel systems
Networks are fundamental for reconstructing the dynamics of many systems, but have the drawback that they are restricted to binary relations. Hypergraphs extend relational structure to multi-vertex edges, but are essentially set-theoretic and unable to represent essential structural properties. Hypernetworks are a natural multidimensional generalisation of networks, representing n-ary relations by simplices with n vertices. The assembly of vertices to make simplices is key for moving between levels in multilevel systems, and integrating dynamics between levels. It is argued that hypernetworks are necessary, if not sufficient, for reconstructing the dynamics of multilevel complex systems
Volumetric-mapping-based inverse design of 3D architected materials and mobility control by topology reconstruction
The recent development of modular origami structures has ushered in a new era
for active metamaterials with multiple degrees of freedom (multi-DOF). Notably,
no systematic inverse design approach for volumetric modular origami structures
has been reported. Moreover, very few topologies of modular origami have been
studied for the design of active metamaterials with multi-DOF. Herein, we
develop an inverse design method and reconfigurable algorithm for constructing
3D active architected structures - we synthesize modular origami structures
that can be volumetrically mapped to a target 3D shape. We can control the
reconfigurability by reconstructing the topology of the architected structures.
Our inverse design based on volumetric mapping with mobility control by
topology reconstruction can be used to construct architected metamaterials with
any 3D complex shape that are also transformable with multi-DOF. Our work opens
a new path toward 3D reconfigurable structures based on volumetric inverse
design. This work is significant for the design of 3D active metamaterials and
3D morphing devices for automotive, aerospace, and biomedical engineering
applications.Comment: 36 page
ADAM: a general method for using various data types in asteroid reconstruction
We introduce ADAM, the All-Data Asteroid Modelling algorithm. ADAM is simple
and universal since it handles all disk-resolved data types (adaptive optics or
other images, interferometry, and range-Doppler radar data) in a uniform manner
via the 2D Fourier transform, enabling fast convergence in model optimization.
The resolved data can be combined with disk-integrated data (photometry). In
the reconstruction process, the difference between each data type is only a few
code lines defining the particular generalized projection from 3D onto a 2D
image plane. Occultation timings can be included as sparse silhouettes, and
thermal infrared data are efficiently handled with an approximate algorithm
that is sufficient in practice due to the dominance of the high-contrast
(boundary) pixels over the low-contrast (interior) ones. This is of particular
importance to the raw ALMA data that can be directly handled by ADAM without
having to construct the standard image. We study the reliability of the
inversion by using the independent shape supports of function series and
control-point surfaces. When other data are lacking, one can carry out fast
nonconvex lightcurve-only inversion, but any shape models resulting from it
should only be taken as illustrative global-scale ones.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to A&
Combinatorics and Geometry of Transportation Polytopes: An Update
A transportation polytope consists of all multidimensional arrays or tables
of non-negative real numbers that satisfy certain sum conditions on subsets of
the entries. They arise naturally in optimization and statistics, and also have
interest for discrete mathematics because permutation matrices, latin squares,
and magic squares appear naturally as lattice points of these polytopes.
In this paper we survey advances on the understanding of the combinatorics
and geometry of these polyhedra and include some recent unpublished results on
the diameter of graphs of these polytopes. In particular, this is a thirty-year
update on the status of a list of open questions last visited in the 1984 book
by Yemelichev, Kovalev and Kravtsov and the 1986 survey paper of Vlach.Comment: 35 pages, 13 figure
- âŠ