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Talk

The Average Number of Points in a Spanned Hyperplane

  • Matthew Kroeker
Uni P-701 Universität Leipzig (Leipzig)

Abstract

A classic theorem in discrete geometry, the Sylvester-Gallai Theorem, says that for any finite, non-collinear set of points in the plane, there is a (spanned) line containing exactly two of them. A stronger result, due to Melchior, says that a spanned line intersects such a point-set in fewer than three points on average. In this talk, I will sketch the proof of the following three-dimensional version of Melchior’s theorem: given a finite set of points in 3-space, the average number of points in a spanned plane is at most an absolute constant, unless that point-set is coplanar or contained in the union of two lines (in which cases the average could be arbitrarily large). I will also present a generalization of this result to hyperplanes of arbitrary dimension, and discuss its connection to an old problem of Motzkin, Grünbaum, Erd\H{o}s and Purdy concerning red-blue arrangements of points in the plane.

This talk is based on joint works with Rutger Campbell, Jim Geelen and Ben Lund.

seminar
07.12.22 28.01.26

Seminar on Algebra and Combinatorics Seminar on Algebra and Combinatorics

Universität Leipzig Uni P-701