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    Asymptotic bounds on the combinatorial diameter of random polytopes

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    The combinatorial diameter diam⁑(P)\operatorname{diam}(P) of a polytope PP is the maximum shortest path distance between any pair of vertices. In this paper, we provide upper and lower bounds on the combinatorial diameter of a random "spherical" polytope, which is tight to within one factor of dimension when the number of inequalities is large compared to the dimension. More precisely, for an nn-dimensional polytope PP defined by the intersection of mm i.i.d.\ half-spaces whose normals are chosen uniformly from the sphere, we show that diam⁑(P)\operatorname{diam}(P) is Ξ©(nm1nβˆ’1)\Omega(n m^{\frac{1}{n-1}}) and O(n2m1nβˆ’1+n54n)O(n^2 m^{\frac{1}{n-1}} + n^5 4^n) with high probability when mβ‰₯2Ξ©(n)m \geq 2^{\Omega(n)}. For the upper bound, we first prove that the number of vertices in any fixed two dimensional projection sharply concentrates around its expectation when mm is large, where we rely on the Θ(n2m1nβˆ’1)\Theta(n^2 m^{\frac{1}{n-1}}) bound on the expectation due to Borgwardt [Math. Oper. Res., 1999]. To obtain the diameter upper bound, we stitch these ``shadows paths'' together over a suitable net using worst-case diameter bounds to connect vertices to the nearest shadow. For the lower bound, we first reduce to lower bounding the diameter of the dual polytope P∘P^\circ, corresponding to a random convex hull, by showing the relation diam⁑(P)β‰₯(nβˆ’1)(diam⁑(P∘)βˆ’2)\operatorname{diam}(P) \geq (n-1)(\operatorname{diam}(P^\circ)-2). We then prove that the shortest path between any ``nearly'' antipodal pair vertices of P∘P^\circ has length Ξ©(m1nβˆ’1)\Omega(m^{\frac{1}{n-1}})
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