616 research outputs found
More indecomposable polyhedra
We apply combinatorial methods to a geometric problem: the classification of
polytopes, in terms of Minkowski decomposability. Various properties of
skeletons of polytopes are exhibited, each sufficient to guarantee
indecomposability of a significant class of polytopes. We illustrate further
the power of these techniques, compared with the traditional method of
examining triangular faces, with several applications. In any dimension , we show that of all the polytopes with or fewer edges,
only one is decomposable. In 3 dimensions, we complete the classification, in
terms of decomposability, of the 260 combinatorial types of polyhedra with 15
or fewer edges.Comment: PDFLaTeX, 21 pages, 6 figure
NATO's Deterrence Challenges: Report on a Workshop in Vilnius, Lithuania, 10-12 May 2009; Strategic Insights, v. 8, issue 4 (September 2009)
This article appeared in Strategic Insights, v.8, issue 4(September 2009)Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited
Lower bound theorems for general polytopes
For a -dimensional polytope with vertices, , we
calculate precisely the minimum possible number of -dimensional faces, when
or . This confirms a conjecture of Gr\"unbaum, for these
values of . For , we solve the same problem when or ; the
solution was already known for . In all these cases, we give a
characterisation of the minimising polytopes. We also show that there are many
gaps in the possible number of -faces: for example, there is no polytope
with 80 edges in dimension 10, and a polytope with 407 edges can have dimension
at most 23.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figure
Strictly convex banach algebras
We discuss two facets of the interaction between geometry and algebra in Banach algebras. In the class of unital Banach algebras, there is essentially one known example which is also strictly convex as a Banach space. We recall this example, which is finite-dimensional, and consider the open question of generalising it to infinite dimensions. In
David Yost + ICSC : : Observing Everything Interactions : A Personal Journey
This project is about taking a personal journey to photograph thoughtless acts (human behaviors) or observations of how and why people use products and services in their natural settings. This project contains photographs and personal narrative interpretations of each photo provided by the author. The observations and personalized interpretations of them are intended to get people to inform, inspire, become more curious, aware, and observant of how we as a society design products and services and solve problems efficiently and effectively. These observations and interpretations are also intended to illustrate patterns that point to more a universal need. The final product developed is a draft photo book
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