English

Torsion in the Matching Complex and Chessboard Complex

Combinatorics 2007-05-23 v1

Abstract

Topological properties of the matching complex were first studied by Bouc in connection with Quillen complexes, and topological properties of the chessboard complex were first studied by Garst in connection with Tits coset complexes. Bj\"orner, Lov\'asz, Vr\'ecica and {\v{Z}}ivaljevi\'c established bounds on the connectivity of these complexes and conjectured that these bounds are sharp. In this paper we show that the conjecture is true by establishing the nonvanishing of integral homology in the degrees given by these bounds. Moreover, we show that for sufficiently large nn, the bottom nonvanishing homology of the matching complex MnM_n is an elementary 3-group, improving a result of Bouc, and that the bottom nonvanishing homology of the chessboard complex Mn,nM_{n,n} is a 3-group of exponent at most 9. When n2mod3n \equiv 2 \bmod 3, the bottom nonvanishing homology of Mn,nM_{n,n} is shown to be Z3\Z_3. Our proofs rely on computer calculations, long exact sequences, representation theory, and tableau combinatorics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.math/0409054,
  title  = {Torsion in the Matching Complex and Chessboard Complex},
  author = {John Shareshian and Michelle L. Wachs},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:math/0409054},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

48 pages, 5 figures