3 research outputs found

    Spectral sequences in combinatorial geometry: Cheeses, Inscribed sets, and Borsuk-Ulam type theorems

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    Algebraic topological methods are especially suited to determining the nonexistence of continu- ous mappings satisfying certain properties. In combinatorial problems it is sometimes possible to define a mapping from a space X of configurations to a Euclidean space Rm in which a subspace, a discriminant, often an arrangement of linear subspaces A, expresses a desirable condition on the configurations. Add symmetries of all these data under a group G for which the mapping is equivariant. Removing the discriminant leads to the problem of the existence of an equivariant mapping from X to Rm - the discriminant. Algebraic topology may be applied to show that no such mapping exists, and hence the original equivariant mapping must meet the discriminant. We introduce a general framework, based on a comparison of Leray-Serre spectral sequences. This comparison can be related to the theory of the Fadell-Husseini index. We apply the framework to: - solve a mass partition problem (antipodal cheeses) in Rd, - determine the existence of a class of inscribed 5-element sets on a deformed 2-sphere, - obtain two different generalizations of the theorem of Dold for the nonexistence of equivariant maps which generalizes the Borsuk-Ulam theorem

    Optimal bounds for the colored Tverberg problem

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    We prove a "Tverberg type" multiple intersection theorem. It strengthens the prime case of the original Tverberg theorem from 1966, as well as the topological Tverberg theorem of B´ar´any et al. (1980), by adding color constraints. It also provides an improved bound for the (topological) colored Tverberg problem of B´ar´any & Larman (1992) that is tight in the prime case and asymptotically optimal in the general case. The proof is based on relative equivariant obstruction theory
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