192
Compulsory

When a course instance has been created from a template, the course instance will be in this state

  • Data is usually still incomplete and everything can still be edited.
  • Lecturers or secretaries can move the state forward to Edited.

This is the first in a series of three courses on discrete geometry. The aim of the course is a skillful handling of discrete geometric structures including analysis and proof techniques. The material will be a selection of the following topics:
Basic structures in discrete geometry
  • polyhedra and polyhedral complexes
  • configurations of points, hyperplanes, subspaces
  • Subdivisions and triangulations (including Delaunay and Voronoi)
  • Polytope theory
  • Representations and the theorem of Minkowski-Weyl
  • polarity, simple/simplicial polytopes, shellability
  • shellability, face lattices, f-vectors, Euler- and Dehn-Sommerville
  • graphs, diameters, Hirsch (ex-)conjecture
  • Geometry of linear programming
  • linear programs, simplex algorithm, LP-duality
  • Combinatorial geometry / Geometric combinatorics
  • Arrangements of points and lines, Sylvester-Gallai, Erdos-Szekeres,
  • Szemeredi--Trotter
  • Arrangements, zonotopes, zonotopal tilings, oriented matroids
  • Examples, examples, examples
  • regular polytopes, centrally symmetric polytopes
  • extremal polytopes, cyclic/neighborly polytopes, stacked polytopes
  • combinatorial optimization and 0/1-polytopes


  • For students with an interest in discrete mathematics and geometry, this is the starting point to specialize in discrete geometry. The topics addressed in the course supplement and deepen the understanding for discrete-geometric structures appearing in differential geometry, topology, combinatorics, and algebraic geometry.
    This is the first in a series of three courses on discrete geometry. The aim of the course is a skillful handling of discrete geometric structures including analysis and proof techniques. The material will be a selection of the following topics:
    Basic structures in discrete geometry
  • polyhedra and polyhedral complexes
  • configurations of points, hyperplanes, subspaces
  • Subdivisions and triangulations (including Delaunay and Voronoi)
  • Polytope theory
  • Representations and the theorem of Minkowski-Weyl
  • polarity, simple/simplicial polytopes, shellability
  • shellability, face lattices, f-vectors, Euler- and Dehn-Sommerville
  • graphs, diameters, Hirsch (ex-)conjecture
  • Geometry of linear programming
  • linear programs, simplex algorithm, LP-duality
  • Combinatorial geometry / Geometric combinatorics
  • Arrangements of points and lines, Sylvester-Gallai, Erdos-Szekeres,
  • Szemeredi--Trotter
  • Arrangements, zonotopes, zonotopal tilings, oriented matroids
  • Examples, examples, examples
  • regular polytopes, centrally symmetric polytopes
  • extremal polytopes, cyclic/neighborly polytopes, stacked polytopes
  • combinatorial optimization and 0/1-polytopes


  • For students with an interest in discrete mathematics and geometry, this is the starting point to specialize in discrete geometry. The topics addressed in the course supplement and deepen the understanding for discrete-geometric structures appearing in differential geometry, topology, combinatorics, and algebraic geometry.

    Cross-language

    192 020
    Compulsory

    Expectant Mother

    Not dangerous
    Partly dangerous
    Alternative Course
    Dangerous

    Nursing Mother

    Not dangerous
    Partly dangerous
    Alternative Course
    Dangerous

    AncillaryCourses

    Übung zu Diskrete Geometrie I

    Expectant Mother

    Not dangerous
    Partly dangerous
    Alternative Course
    Dangerous

    Nursing Mother

    Not dangerous
    Partly dangerous
    Alternative Course
    Dangerous