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In mathematics, the Dehn–Sommerville equations are a complete set of linear relations between the numbers of faces of different dimension of a simplicial polytope. For polytopes of dimension 4 and 5, they were found by Max Dehn in 1905. Their general form was established by Duncan Sommerville in 1927. The Dehn–Sommerville equations can be restated as a symmetry condition for the h-vector of the simplicial polytope and this has become the standard formulation in recent combinatorics literature. By duality, analogous equations hold for simple polytopes.

Statement

Let P be a d-dimensional simplicial polytope. For i = 0, 1, ..., d−1, let fi denote the number of i-dimensional faces of P. The sequence

f(P)=(f0,f1,,fd1)

is called the f-vector of the polytope P. Additionally, set

f1=1,fd=1.

Then for any k = −1, 0, …, d−2, the following Dehn–Sommerville equation holds:

j=kd1(1)j(j+1k+1)fj=(1)d1fk.

When k = −1, it expresses the fact that Euler characteristic of a (d − 1)-dimensional simplicial sphere is equal to 1 + (−1)d−1.

Dehn–Sommerville equations with different k are not independent. There are several ways to choose a maximal independent subset consisting of [d+12] equations. If d is even then the equations with k = 0, 2, 4, …, d−2 are independent. Another independent set consists of the equations with k = −1, 1, 3, …, d−3. If d is odd then the equations with k = −1, 1, 3, …, d−2 form one independent set and the equations with k = −1, 0, 2, 4, …, d−3 form another.

Equivalent formulations

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Sommerville found a different way to state these equations:

i=1k1(1)d+i(di1dk)fi=i=1dk1(1)i(di1k)fi,

where 0 ≤ k ≤ ½(d−1). This can be further facilitated introducing the notion of h-vector of P. For k = 0, 1, …, d, let

hk=i=0k(1)ki(diki)fi1.

The sequence

h(P)=(h0,h1,,hd)

is called the h-vector of P. The f-vector and the h-vector uniquely determine each other through the relation

i=0dfi1(t1)di=k=0dhktdk.

Then the Dehn–Sommerville equations can be restated simply as

hk=hdkfor0kd.

The equations with 0 ≤ k ≤ ½(d−1) are independent, and the others are manifestly equivalent to them.

Richard Stanley gave an interpretation of the components of the h-vector of a simplicial convex polytope P in terms of the projective toric variety X associated with (the dual of) P. Namely, they are the dimensions of the even intersection cohomology groups of X:

hk=dimIH2k(X,)

(the odd intersection cohomology groups of X are all zero). In this language, the last form of the Dehn–Sommerville equations, the symmetry of the h-vector, is a manifestation of the Poincaré duality in the intersection cohomology of X.

References

  • Branko Grünbaum, Convex polytopes. Second edition. Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 221, Springer, 2003 ISBN 0-387-00424-6
  • Richard Stanley, Combinatorics and commutative algebra. Second edition. Progress in Mathematics, 41. Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., Boston, MA, 1996. x+164 pp. ISBN 0-8176-3836-9