Rips Complexes of Planar Point Sets
Abstract
Fix a finite set of points in Euclidean -space , thought of as a point-cloud sampling of a certain domain . The Rips complex is a combinatorial simplicial complex based on proximity of neighbors that serves as an easily-computed but high-dimensional approximation to the homotopy type of . There is a natural ``shadow'' projection map from the Rips complex to that has as its image a more accurate -dimensional approximation to the homotopy type of . We demonstrate that this projection map is 1-connected for the planar case . That is, for planar domains, the Rips complex accurately captures connectivity and fundamental group data. This implies that the fundamental group of a Rips complex for a planar point set is a free group. We show that, in contrast, introducing even a small amount of uncertainty in proximity detection leads to `quasi'-Rips complexes with nearly arbitrary fundamental groups. This topological noise can be mitigated by examining a pair of quasi-Rips complexes and using ideas from persistent topology. Finally, we show that the projection map does not preserve higher-order topological data for planar sets, nor does it preserve fundamental group data for point sets in dimension larger than three.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0712.0395,
title = {Rips Complexes of Planar Point Sets},
author = {Erin W. Chambers and Vin de Silva and Jeff Erickson and Robert Ghrist},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0712.0395},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
16 pages, 8 figures