Splitting Polytopes
Abstract
A split of a polytope is a (regular) subdivision with exactly two maximal cells. It turns out that each weight function on the vertices of admits a unique decomposition as a linear combination of weight functions corresponding to the splits of (with a split prime remainder). This generalizes a result of Bandelt and Dress [Adv. Math. 92 (1992)] on the decomposition of finite metric spaces. Introducing the concept of compatibility of splits gives rise to a finite simplicial complex associated with any polytope , the split complex of . Complete descriptions of the split complexes of all hypersimplices are obtained. Moreover, it is shown that these complexes arise as subcomplexes of the tropical (pre-)Grassmannians of Speyer and Sturmfels [Adv. Geom. 4 (2004)].
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.0805.0774,
title = {Splitting Polytopes},
author = {Sven Herrmann and Michael Joswig},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0805.0774},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
25 pages, 7 figures; minor corrections and changes