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Author
Date
2020-12Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
The Ham-Sandwich theorem is a well-known result in geometry. It states that any d mass distributions in R-d can be simultaneously bisected by a hyperplane. The result is tight, that is, there are examples of d + 1 mass distributions that cannot be simultaneously bisected by a single hyperplane. In this paper we will study the following question: given a continuous assignment of mass distributions to certain subsets of R-d, is there a subset on which we can bisect more masses than what is guaranteed by the Ham-Sandwich theorem? We investigate two types of subsets. The first type are linear subspaces of R-d, i.e., k-dimensional flats containing the origin. We show that for any continuous assignment of d mass distributions to the k-dimensional linear subspaces of R-d, there is always a subspace on which we can simultaneously bisect the images of all d assignments. We extend this result to center transversals, a generalization of Ham-Sandwich cuts. As for Ham-Sandwich cuts, we further show that for d - k + 2 masses, we can choose k - 1 of the vectors defining the k-dimensional subspace in which the solution lies. The second type of subsetswe consider are subsets that are determined by families of n hyperplanes in R-d. Also in this case, we find a Ham-Sandwich-type result. In an attempt to solve a conjecture by Langerman about bisections with several cuts, we show that our underlying topological result can be used to prove this conjecture in a relaxed setting. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Discrete & Computational GeometryVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
SpringerSubject
Ham-Sandwich theorem; Center transversal theorem; Topological methods; Mass partitionsOrganisational unit
03457 - Welzl, Emo (emeritus) / Welzl, Emo (emeritus)
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