591 research outputs found
On periodic homeomorphisms of spheres
The purpose of this paper is to study how small orbits of periodic
homemorphisms of spheres can be.Comment: Published by Algebraic and Geometric Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/agt/AGTVol1/agt-1-22.abs.htm
Clustering, Hamming Embedding, Generalized LSH and the Max Norm
We study the convex relaxation of clustering and hamming embedding, focusing
on the asymmetric case (co-clustering and asymmetric hamming embedding),
understanding their relationship to LSH as studied by (Charikar 2002) and to
the max-norm ball, and the differences between their symmetric and asymmetric
versions.Comment: 17 page
Helly-Type Theorems in Property Testing
Helly's theorem is a fundamental result in discrete geometry, describing the
ways in which convex sets intersect with each other. If is a set of
points in , we say that is -clusterable if it can be
partitioned into clusters (subsets) such that each cluster can be contained
in a translated copy of a geometric object . In this paper, as an
application of Helly's theorem, by taking a constant size sample from , we
present a testing algorithm for -clustering, i.e., to distinguish
between two cases: when is -clusterable, and when it is
-far from being -clusterable. A set is -far
from being -clusterable if at least
points need to be removed from to make it -clusterable. We solve
this problem for and when is a symmetric convex object. For , we
solve a weaker version of this problem. Finally, as an application of our
testing result, in clustering with outliers, we show that one can find the
approximate clusters by querying a constant size sample, with high probability
SCD Patterns Have Singular Diffraction
Among the many families of nonperiodic tilings known so far, SCD tilings are
still a bit mysterious. Here, we determine the diffraction spectra of point
sets derived from SCD tilings and show that they have no absolutely continuous
part, that they have a uniformly discrete pure point part on the z-axis, and
that they are otherwise supported on a set of concentric cylinder surfaces
around this axis. For SCD tilings with additional properties, more detailed
results are given.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures; Accepted for Journal of Mathematical Physic
The local atomic quasicrystal structure of the icosahedral Mg25Y11Zn64 alloy
A local and medium range atomic structure model for the face centred
icosahedral (fci) Mg25Y11Zn64 alloy has been established in a sphere of r = 27
A. The model was refined by least squares techniques using the atomic pair
distribution (PDF) function obtained from synchrotron powder diffraction. Three
hierarchies of the atomic arrangement can be found: (i) five types of local
coordination polyhedra for the single atoms, four of which are of Frank-Kasper
type. In turn, they (ii) form a three-shell (Bergman) cluster containing 104
atoms, which is condensed sharing its outer shell with its neighbouring
clusters and (iii) a cluster connecting scheme corresponding to a
three-dimensional tiling leaving space for few glue atoms. Inside adjacent
clusters, Y8-cubes are tilted with respect to each other and thus allow for
overall icosahedral symmetry. It is shown that the title compound is
essentially isomorphic to its holmium analogue. Therefore fci-Mg-Y-Zn can be
seen as the representative structure type for the other rare earth analogues
fci-Mg-Zn-RE (RE = Dy, Er, Ho, Tb) reported in the literature.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 2 table
Lines pinning lines
A line g is a transversal to a family F of convex polytopes in 3-dimensional
space if it intersects every member of F. If, in addition, g is an isolated
point of the space of line transversals to F, we say that F is a pinning of g.
We show that any minimal pinning of a line by convex polytopes such that no
face of a polytope is coplanar with the line has size at most eight. If, in
addition, the polytopes are disjoint, then it has size at most six. We
completely characterize configurations of disjoint polytopes that form minimal
pinnings of a line.Comment: 27 pages, 10 figure
Coloring translates and homothets of a convex body
We obtain improved upper bounds and new lower bounds on the chromatic number
as a linear function of the clique number, for the intersection graphs (and
their complements) of finite families of translates and homothets of a convex
body in \RR^n.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
On optimal entanglement assisted one-shot classical communication
The one-shot success probability of a noisy classical channel for
transmitting one classical bit is the optimal probability with which the bit
can be sent via a single use of the channel. Prevedel et al. (PRL 106, 110505
(2011)) recently showed that for a specific channel, this quantity can be
increased if the parties using the channel share an entangled quantum state. We
completely characterize the optimal entanglement-assisted protocols in terms of
the radius of a set of operators associated with the channel. This
characterization can be used to construct optimal entanglement-assisted
protocols from the given classical channel and to prove the limit of such
protocols. As an example, we show that the Prevedel et al. protocol is optimal
for two-qubit entanglement. We also prove some simple upper bounds on the
improvement that can be obtained from quantum and no-signaling correlations.Comment: 5 pages, plus 7 pages of supplementary material. v2 is significantly
expanded and contains a new result (Theorem 2
Regular Incidence Complexes, Polytopes, and C-Groups
Regular incidence complexes are combinatorial incidence structures
generalizing regular convex polytopes, regular complex polytopes, various types
of incidence geometries, and many other highly symmetric objects. The special
case of abstract regular polytopes has been well-studied. The paper describes
the combinatorial structure of a regular incidence complex in terms of a system
of distinguished generating subgroups of its automorphism group or a
flag-transitive subgroup. Then the groups admitting a flag-transitive action on
an incidence complex are characterized as generalized string C-groups. Further,
extensions of regular incidence complexes are studied, and certain incidence
complexes particularly close to abstract polytopes, called abstract polytope
complexes, are investigated.Comment: 24 pages; to appear in "Discrete Geometry and Symmetry", M. Conder,
A. Deza, and A. Ivic Weiss (eds), Springe
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