Shelling (topology)

In mathematics, a shelling of a simplicial complex is a way of gluing it together from its maximal simplices (simplices that are not a face of another simplex) in a well-behaved way. A complex admitting a shelling is called shellable.

Definition

A d-dimensional simplicial complex is called pure if its maximal simplices all have dimension d. Let be a finite or countably infinite simplicial complex. An ordering of the maximal simplices of is a shelling if the complex is pure and -dimensional for all . That is, the "new" simplex meets the previous simplices along some union of top-dimensional simplices of the boundary of . If is the entire boundary of then is called spanning.

For not necessarily countable, one can define a shelling as a well-ordering of the maximal simplices of having analogous properties.

Properties

Examples

References

  1. Björner, Anders (June 1984). "Some combinatorial and algebraic properties of Coxeter complexes and Tits buildings". Advances in Mathematics. 52 (3): 173–212. doi:10.1016/0001-8708(84)90021-5. ISSN 0001-8708.
  2. Rudin, M.E. (1958-02-14). "An unshellable triangulation of a tetrahedron". Bull. Am. Math. Soc. 64 (3): 90–91. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1958-10168-8. ISSN 1088-9485.
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