Finding large counterexamples by selectively exploring the Pachner graph
Abstract
We often rely on censuses of triangulations to guide our intuition in -manifold topology. However, this can lead to misplaced faith in conjectures if the smallest counterexamples are too large to appear in our census. Since the number of triangulations increases super-exponentially with size, there is no way to expand a census beyond relatively small triangulations; the current census only goes up to tetrahedra. Here, we show that it is feasible to search for large and hard-to-find counterexamples by using heuristics to selectively (rather than exhaustively) enumerate triangulations. We use this idea to find counterexamples to three conjectures which ask, for certain -manifolds, whether one-vertex triangulations always have a "distinctive" edge that would allow us to recognise the -manifold.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2303.06321,
title = {Finding large counterexamples by selectively exploring the Pachner graph},
author = {Benjamin A. Burton and Alexander He},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2303.06321},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
37 pages, 28 figures. A short version appeared in the proceedings for SoCG 2023; this full version contains some new results that do not appear in the SoCG version. v2: Minor corrections in sections 3.1 and 3.2, and updates to exposition