Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Notation
- 1 A First Orientation Session
- 2 A Second Orientation Session
- 3 Axiomatics
- 4 From Face Lattices to Topology
- 5 Topological Models for Oriented Matroids
- 6 Arrangements of Pseudolines
- 7 Constructions
- 8 Realizability
- 9 Convex Polytopes
- 10 Linear Programming
- Appendix Some Current Frontiers of Research
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Topological Models for Oriented Matroids
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Preface to the Second Edition
- Notation
- 1 A First Orientation Session
- 2 A Second Orientation Session
- 3 Axiomatics
- 4 From Face Lattices to Topology
- 5 Topological Models for Oriented Matroids
- 6 Arrangements of Pseudolines
- 7 Constructions
- 8 Realizability
- 9 Convex Polytopes
- 10 Linear Programming
- Appendix Some Current Frontiers of Research
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
It was described already in Chapter 1 how realizable oriented matroids correspond to arrangements of hyperplanes in Rd. The content of the Topological Representation Theorem is that general oriented matroids similarly correspond to arrangements of generalized hyperplanes, each obtained from a flat hyperplane by tame topological deformation. This important result, the proof of which was begun already in the preceding chapter, is the main concern of this chapter. In the last section it is discussed to what extent points rather than hyperplanes can be used to represent the elements of an oriented matroid in a topologically deformed arrangement. It turns out that in the non-realizable case there are severe limitations to such an analogue of projective polarity.
Arrangements of pseudospheres
A linear oriented matroid can be described as an arrangement A of oriented hyperplanes through the origin in Rd+1. This information is equivalently represented by the arrangement A′ = {H ∩ Sd : H ε A} of linear (d – l)-subspheres in Sd together with a choice of orientation (positive and negative hemisphere) for each H ∩ Sd. If these subspheres are topologically deformed in a tame way that preserves their intersection pattern, the arrangement will still represent an oriented matroid. This idea leads to “arrangements of pseudospheres”, which will be discussed in this section.
We start with a discussion of codimension 1 subspheres of Sd. If S is a (d–1)-sphere embedded in Sd (i.e., S ⊆ Sd and S is homeomorphic to Sd-1), then by the Jordan-Brouwer separation theorem Sd\S consists of two connected components such that S is the boundary of each.
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- Oriented Matroids , pp. 225 - 246Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999