Neha Patil (Editor)

Shelling (topology)

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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.

Contents

Definition

A d-dimensional simplicial complex is called pure if its maximal simplices all have dimension d. Let Δ be a finite or countably infinite simplicial complex. An ordering C 1 , C 2 , of the maximal simplices of Δ is a shelling if the complex B k := ( i = 1 k 1 C i ) C k is pure and ( dim C k 1 ) -dimensional for all k = 2 , 3 , . That is, the "new" simplex C k meets the previous simplices along some union B k of top-dimensional simplices of the boundary of C k . If B k is the entire boundary of C k then C k is called spanning.

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

Properties

  • A shellable complex is homotopy equivalent to a wedge sum of spheres, one for each spanning simplex and of corresponding dimension.
  • A shellable complex may admit many different shellings, but the number of spanning simplices, and their dimensions, do not depend on the choice of shelling. This follows from the previous property.
  • Examples

  • Every Coxeter complex, and more generally every building, is shellable.
  • There is an unshellable triangulation of the tetrahedron.
  • References

    Shelling (topology) Wikipedia