Higher rank antipodality

Abstract

Motivated by general probability theory, we say that the set XX in Rd\mathbb{R}^d is \emph{antipodal of rank kk}, if for any k+1k+1 elements q1,qk+1Xq_1,\ldots q_{k+1}\in X, there is an affine map from convX\mathrm{conv} X to the kk-dimensional simplex Δk\Delta_k that maps q1,qk+1q_1,\ldots q_{k+1} onto the k+1k+1 vertices of Δk\Delta_k. For k=1k=1, it coincides with the well-studied notion of (pairwise) antipodality introduced by Klee. We consider the following natural generalization of Klee's problem on antipodal sets: What is the maximum size of an antipodal set of rank kk in Rd\mathbb{R}^d? We present a geometric characterization of antipodal sets of rank kk and adapting the argument of Danzer and Gr\"unbaum originally developed for the k=1k=1 case, we prove an upper bound which is exponential in the dimension. We point out that this problem can be connected to a classical question in computer science on finding perfect hashes, and it provides a lower bound on the maximum size, which is also exponential in the dimension.Comment: 11 page

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