In
geometry
Geometry (; ) is a branch of mathematics concerned with properties of space such as the distance, shape, size, and relative position of figures. Geometry is, along with arithmetic, one of the oldest branches of mathematics. A mathematician w ...
, a Hanner polytope is a
convex polytope constructed recursively by
Cartesian product
In mathematics, specifically set theory, the Cartesian product of two sets and , denoted , is the set of all ordered pairs where is an element of and is an element of . In terms of set-builder notation, that is
A\times B = \.
A table c ...
and
polar dual operations. Hanner polytopes are named after Swedish mathematician
Olof Hanner, who introduced them in 1956.
[.]
Construction
The Hanner polytopes are constructed recursively by the following rules:
[.]
*A line segment is a one-dimensional Hanner polytope.
*The Cartesian product of every two Hanner polytopes is another Hanner polytope, whose dimension is the sum of the dimensions of the two given polytopes.
*The dual of a Hanner polytope is another Hanner polytope of the same dimension.
They are exactly the polytopes that can be constructed using only these rules: that is, every Hanner polytope can be formed from line segments by a sequence of product and dual operations.
[
Alternatively and equivalently to the polar dual operation, the Hanner polytopes may be constructed by Cartesian products and ]direct sum
The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently but analogously for different kinds of structures. As an example, the direct sum of two abelian groups A and B is anothe ...
s, the dual of the Cartesian products. This direct sum operation combines two polytopes by placing them in two linearly independent subspaces of a larger space and then constructing the convex hull
In geometry, the convex hull, convex envelope or convex closure of a shape is the smallest convex set that contains it. The convex hull may be defined either as the intersection of all convex sets containing a given subset of a Euclidean space, ...
of their union.
Examples
A cube
A cube or regular hexahedron is a three-dimensional space, three-dimensional solid object in geometry, which is bounded by six congruent square (geometry), square faces, a type of polyhedron. It has twelve congruent edges and eight vertices. It i ...
is a Hanner polytope, and can be constructed as a Cartesian product of three line segments. Its dual, the octahedron
In geometry, an octahedron (: octahedra or octahedrons) is any polyhedron with eight faces. One special case is the regular octahedron, a Platonic solid composed of eight equilateral triangles, four of which meet at each vertex. Many types of i ...
, is also a Hanner polytope, the direct sum of three line segments. In three dimensions all Hanner polytopes are combinatorially equivalent to one of these two types of polytopes. In higher dimensions the hypercube
In geometry, a hypercube is an ''n''-dimensional analogue of a square ( ) and a cube ( ); the special case for is known as a ''tesseract''. It is a closed, compact, convex figure whose 1- skeleton consists of groups of opposite parallel l ...
s and cross polytopes, analogues of the cube and octahedron, are again Hanner polytopes. However, more examples are possible. For instance, the octahedral prism, a four-dimensional prism with an octahedron as its base, is also a Hanner polytope, as is its dual, the cubical bipyramid.
Properties
Coordinate representation
Every Hanner polytope can be given vertex coordinates that are 0, 1, or −1.[.] More explicitly, if and are Hanner polytopes with coordinates in this form, then the coordinates of the vertices of the Cartesian product of and are formed by concatenating the coordinates of a vertex in with the coordinates of a vertex in . The coordinates of the vertices of the direct sum of and are formed either by concatenating the coordinates of a vertex in with a vector of zeros, or by concatenating a vector of zeros with the coordinates of a vertex in .
Because the polar dual of a Hanner polytope is another Hanner polytope, the Hanner polytopes have the property that both they and their duals have coordinates in .
Number of faces
Every Hanner polytope is centrally symmetric, and has exactly 3''d'' nonempty faces (including the polytope itself as a face but not including the empty set). For instance, the cube has 8 vertices, 12 edges, 6 squares, and 1 cube (itself) as faces; . The Hanner polytopes form an important class of examples for Kalai's 3''d'' conjecture that all centrally symmetric polytopes have at least 3''d'' nonempty faces.[.]
Pairs of opposite facets and vertices
In a Hanner polytope, every two opposite facets are disjoint, and together include all of the vertices of the polytope, so that the convex hull
In geometry, the convex hull, convex envelope or convex closure of a shape is the smallest convex set that contains it. The convex hull may be defined either as the intersection of all convex sets containing a given subset of a Euclidean space, ...
of the two facets is the whole polytope.[.] As a simple consequence of this fact, all facets of a Hanner polytope have the same number of vertices as each other (half the number of vertices of the whole polytope). However, the facets may not all be isomorphic to each other. For instance, in the octahedral prism, two of the facets are octahedra, and the other eight facets are triangular prism
In geometry, a triangular prism or trigonal prism is a Prism (geometry), prism with 2 triangular bases. If the edges pair with each triangle's vertex and if they are perpendicular to the base, it is a ''right triangular prism''. A right triangul ...
s. Dually, in every Hanner polytope, every two opposite vertices touch disjoint sets of facets, and together touch all of the facets of the polytope.
Mahler volume
The Mahler volume of a Hanner polytope (the product of its volume and the volume of its polar dual) is the same as for a cube or cross polytope. If the Mahler conjecture is true, these polytopes are the minimizers of Mahler volume among all the centrally symmetric convex bodies.
Helly property
The translates of a hypercube
In geometry, a hypercube is an ''n''-dimensional analogue of a square ( ) and a cube ( ); the special case for is known as a ''tesseract''. It is a closed, compact, convex figure whose 1- skeleton consists of groups of opposite parallel l ...
(or of an affine transformation of it, a parallelotope) form a Helly family: every set of translates that have nonempty pairwise intersections has a nonempty intersection. Moreover, these are the only convex bodies with this property.
For any other centrally symmetric convex polytope , defined to be the smallest number of translates of that do not form a Helly family (they intersect pairwise but have an empty intersection). He showed that is either three or four, and gave the Hanner polytopes as examples of polytopes for which it is four. later showed that this property can be used to characterize the Hanner polytopes: they are (up to affine transformation) exactly the polytopes for which .[.]
Combinatorial enumeration
The number of combinatorial types of Hanner polytopes of dimension is the same as the number of simple
Simple or SIMPLE may refer to:
*Simplicity, the state or quality of being simple
Arts and entertainment
* ''Simple'' (album), by Andy Yorke, 2008, and its title track
* "Simple" (Florida Georgia Line song), 2018
* "Simple", a song by John ...
series–parallel graphs with unlabeled edges.[/] For it is:
:1, 1, 2, 4, 8, 18, 40, 94, 224, 548, ... .
A more explicit bijection
In mathematics, a bijection, bijective function, or one-to-one correspondence is a function between two sets such that each element of the second set (the codomain) is the image of exactly one element of the first set (the domain). Equival ...
between the Hanner polytopes of dimension and the cographs with vertices is given by . For this bijection, the Hanner polytopes are assumed to be represented geometrically using coordinates in rather than as combinatorial equivalence classes; in particular, there are two different geometric forms of a Hanner polytope even in two dimensions, the square with vertex coordinates and the diamond with vertex coordinates and . Given a -dimensional polytope with vertex coordinates in , Reisner defines an associated graph whose vertices correspond to the unit vectors of the space containing the polytope, and for which two vectors are connected by an edge if their sum lies outside the polytope. He observes that the graphs of Hanner polytopes are cographs, which he characterizes in two ways: the graphs with no induced path of length three, and the graphs whose induced subgraphs are all either disconnected or the complements of disconnected graphs. Conversely, every cograph can be represented in this way by a Hanner polytope.
Hanner spaces
The Hanner polytopes are the unit balls of a family of finite-dimensional Banach space
In mathematics, more specifically in functional analysis, a Banach space (, ) is a complete normed vector space. Thus, a Banach space is a vector space with a metric that allows the computation of vector length and distance between vectors and ...
s called Hanner spaces. The Hanner spaces are the spaces that can be built up from one-dimensional spaces by and combinations.
References
{{reflist
Polytopes