Using the Borsuk-Ulam Theorem

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2003-08-01
Publisher(s): Springer Nature
List Price: $69.99

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Summary

A number of important results in combinatorics, discrete geometry, and theoretical computer science have been proved using algebraic topology. While the results are quite famous, their proofs are not so widely understood. They are scattered in research papers or outlined in surveys, and they often use topological notions not commonly known among combinatorialists or computer scientists. This book is the first textbook treatment of a significant part of such results. It focuses on so-called equivariant methods, based on the Borsuk-Ulam theorem and its generalizations. The topological tools are intentionally kept on a very elementary level (for example, homology theory and homotopy groups are completely avoided). No prior knowledge of algebraic topology is assumed, only a background in undergraduate mathematics, and the required topological notions and results are gradually explained. At the same time, many substantial combinatorial results are covered, sometimes with some of the most important results, such as Kneser's conjecture, showing them from various points of view. The history of the presented material, references, related results, and more advanced methods are surveyed in separate subsections. The text is accompanied by numerous exercises, of varying difficulty. Many of the exercises actually outline additional results that did not fit in the main text. The book is richly illustrated, and it has a detailed index and an extensive bibliography. This text started with a one-semester graduate course the author taught in fall 1993 in Prague. The transcripts of the lectures by the participants served as a basis of the first version. Some years later, a course partially based on that text was taught by G??nter M. Ziegler in Berlin. The book is based on a thoroughly rewritten version prepared during a pre-doctoral course the author taught at the ETH Zurich in fall 2001. Most of the material was covered in the course: Chapter 1 was assigned as an introductory reading text, and the other chapters were presented in approximately 30 hours of teaching (by 45 minutes), with some omissions throughout and with only a sketchy presentation of the last chapter.

Author Biography

Jiri Matousek is Professor of Computer Science at Charles University in Prague.

Table of Contents

Preface v
Preliminaries xi
Simplicial Complexes
1(20)
Topological Spaces
1(3)
Homotopy Equivalence and Homotopy
4(3)
Geometric Simplicial Complexes
7(3)
Triangulations
10(3)
Abstract Simplicial Complexes
13(3)
Dimension of Geometric Realizations
16(1)
Simplicial Complexes and Posets
17(4)
The Borsuk--Ulam Theorem
21(26)
The Borsuk--Ulam Theorem in Various Guises
22(8)
A Geometric Proof
30(4)
A Discrete Version: Tucker's Lemma
34(7)
Another Proof of Tucker's Lemma
41(6)
Direct Applications of Borsuk--Ulam
47(22)
The Ham Sandwich Theorem
47(6)
On Multicolored Partitions and Necklaces
53(4)
Kneser's Conjecture
57(4)
More General Kneser Graphs: Dol'nikov's theorem
61(3)
Gale's Lemma and Schrijver's Theorem
64(5)
A Topological Interlude
69(18)
Quotient Spaces
69(4)
Joins (and Products)
73(5)
k-Connectedness
78(2)
Recipes for Showing k-Connectedness
80(2)
Cell Complexes
82(5)
Z2-Maps and Nonembeddability
87(46)
Nonembeddability Theorems: An Introduction
88(4)
Z2-Spaces and Z2-Maps
92(3)
The Z2-Index
95(8)
Deleted Products Good
103(4)
...Deleted Joins Better
107(4)
Bier Spheres and the Van Kampen Flores Theorem
111(5)
Sarkaria's Inequality
116(3)
Nonembeddability and Kneser Colorings
119(4)
A General Lower Bound for the Chromatic Number
123(10)
Multiple Points of Coincidence
133(32)
G-Spaces
133(4)
EnG Spaces and the G-Index
137(8)
Deleted Joins and Deleted Products
145(4)
Necklace for Many Thieves
149(2)
The Topological Tverberg Theorem
151(4)
Many Tverberg Partitions
155(2)
Zp-Index, Kneser Colorings, and p-Fold Points
157(4)
The Colored Tverberg Theorem
161(4)
A Quick Summary 165(6)
Hints to Selected Exercises 171(2)
References 173(16)
Index 189

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