The number of realisations of a rigid graph in Euclidean and spherical geometries
Abstract
A graph is $d$-rigid if for any generic realisation of the graph in $\mathbb{R}^d$ (equivalently, the $d$-dimensional sphere $\mathbb{S}^d$), there are only finitely many non-congruent realisations in the same space with the same edge lengths. By extending this definition to complex realisations in a natural way, we define $c_d(G)$ to be the number of equivalent $d$-dimensional complex realisations of a $d$-rigid graph $G$ for a given generic realisation, and $c^*_d(G)$ to be the number of equivalent $d$-dimensional complex spherical realisations of $G$ for a given generic spherical realisation. Somewhat surprisingly, these two realisation numbers are not always equal. Recently developed algorithms for computing realisation numbers determined that the inequality $c_2(G) \leq c_2^*(G)$ holds for any minimally 2-rigid graph $G$ with 12 vertices or less. In this paper we confirm that, for any dimension $d$, the inequality $c_d(G) \leq c_d^*(G)$ holds for every $d$-rigid graph $G$. This result is obtained via new techniques involving coning, the graph operation that adds an extra vertex adjacent to all original vertices of the graph.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- September 2023
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2309.16416
- Bibcode:
- 2023arXiv230916416D
- Keywords:
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- Mathematics - Combinatorics;
- Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry;
- 52C25 (Primary) 05C30;
- 68R10;
- 68R12 (Secondary)
- E-Print:
- 33 pages, 8 figures