707 research outputs found
Stress matrices and global rigidity of frameworks on surfaces
In 2005, Bob Connelly showed that a generic framework in \bR^d is globally
rigid if it has a stress matrix of maximum possible rank, and that this
sufficient condition for generic global rigidity is preserved by the
1-extension operation. His results gave a key step in the characterisation of
generic global rigidity in the plane. We extend these results to frameworks on
surfaces in \bR^3. For a framework on a family of concentric cylinders, cones
or ellipsoids, we show that there is a natural surface stress matrix arising
from assigning edge and vertex weights to the framework, in equilibrium at each
vertex. In the case of cylinders and ellipsoids, we show that having a maximum
rank stress matrix is sufficient to guarantee generic global rigidity on the
surface. We then show that this sufficient condition for generic global
rigidity is preserved under 1-extension and use this to make progress on the
problem of characterising generic global rigidity on the cylinder.Comment: Significant changes due to an error in the proof of Theorem 5.1 in
the previous version which we have only been able to resolve for 'generic'
surface
A necessary condition for generic rigidity of bar-and-joint frameworks in -space
A graph is -sparse if each subset with induces at most edges in . Maxwell showed in
1864 that a necessary condition for a generic bar-and-joint framework with at
least vertices to be rigid in is that should have a
-sparse subgraph with edges. This necessary
condition is also sufficient when but not when . Cheng and
Sitharam strengthened Maxwell's condition by showing that every maximal
-sparse subgraph of should have edges when
. We extend their result to all .Comment: There was an error in the proof of Theorem 3.3(b) in version 1 of
this paper. A weaker statement was proved in version 2 and then used to
derive the main result Theorem 4.1 when . The proof technique was
subsequently refined in collaboration with Hakan Guler to extend this result
to all in Theorem 3.3 of version
Radically solvable graphs
A 2-dimensional framework is a straight line realisation of a graph in the
Euclidean plane. It is radically solvable if the set of vertex coordinates is
contained in a radical extension of the field of rationals extended by the
squared edge lengths. We show that the radical solvability of a generic
framework depends only on its underlying graph and characterise which planar
graphs give rise to radically solvable generic frameworks. We conjecture that
our characterisation extends to all graphs
Necessary Conditions for the Generic Global Rigidity of Frameworks on Surfaces
A result due in its various parts to Hendrickson, Connelly, and Jackson and
Jord\'an, provides a purely combinatorial characterisation of global rigidity
for generic bar-joint frameworks in . The analogous conditions
are known to be insufficient to characterise generic global rigidity in higher
dimensions. Recently Laman-type characterisations of rigidity have been
obtained for generic frameworks in when the vertices are
constrained to lie on various surfaces, such as the cylinder and the cone. In
this paper we obtain analogues of Hendrickson's necessary conditions for the
global rigidity of generic frameworks on the cylinder, cone and ellipsoid.Comment: 13 page
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