Ky Fan Lemma
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In mathematics, Ky Fan's lemma (KFL) is a combinatorial lemma about labellings of triangulations. It is a generalization of
Tucker's lemma In mathematics, Tucker's lemma is a combinatorial analog of the Borsuk–Ulam theorem, named after Albert W. Tucker. Let T be a triangulation of the closed ''n''-dimensional ball B_n. Assume T is antipodally symmetric on the boundary sphere ...
. It was proved by
Ky Fan Ky Fan (樊𰋀, , September 19, 1914 – March 22, 2010) was a Chinese-born American mathematician. He was a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Biography Fan was born in Hangzhou, the capital of Zhejian ...
in 1952.


Definitions

KFL uses the following concepts. * B_n: the closed ''n''-dimensional ball. ** S_: its boundary
sphere A sphere () is a geometrical object that is a three-dimensional analogue to a two-dimensional circle. A sphere is the set of points that are all at the same distance from a given point in three-dimensional space.. That given point is th ...
. * ''T'': a triangulation of B_n. ** ''T'' is called ''boundary antipodally symmetric'' if the subset of
simplices In geometry, a simplex (plural: simplexes or simplices) is a generalization of the notion of a triangle or tetrahedron to arbitrary dimensions. The simplex is so-named because it represents the simplest possible polytope in any given dimension. ...
of ''T'' which are in S_ provides a triangulation of S_ where if σ is a simplex then so is −σ. * ''L'': a ''labeling'' of the vertices of ''T'', which assigns to each vertex a non-zero integer: L: V(T) \to \mathbb\setminus\. ** ''L'' is called '' boundary odd'' if for every vertex v\in S_, L(-v) = -L(v). * An edge of ''T'' is called a ''complementary edge'' of ''L'' if the labels of its two endpoints have the same size and opposite signs, e.g. . * An ''n''-dimensional simplex of ''T'' is called an ''alternating simplex'' of ''T'' if its labels have different sizes with alternating signs, e.g. or .


Statement

Let ''T'' be a boundary-antipodally-symmetric triangulation of B_n and ''L'' a boundary-odd labeling of ''T''. If ''L'' has no complementary edge, then ''L'' has an odd number of ''n''-dimensional alternating simplices.


Corollary:

Tucker's lemma In mathematics, Tucker's lemma is a combinatorial analog of the Borsuk–Ulam theorem, named after Albert W. Tucker. Let T be a triangulation of the closed ''n''-dimensional ball B_n. Assume T is antipodally symmetric on the boundary sphere ...

By definition, an ''n''-dimensional alternating simplex must have labels with ''n'' + 1 different sizes. This means that, if the labeling ''L'' uses only ''n'' different sizes (i.e. L: V(T) \to \), it cannot have an ''n''-dimensional alternating simplex. Hence, by KFL, ''L'' must have a complementary edge.


Proof

KFL can be proved constructively based on a path-based algorithm. The algorithm it starts at a certain point or edge of the triangulation, then goes from simplex to simplex according to prescribed rules, until it is not possible to proceed any more. It can be proved that the path must end in an alternating simplex. The proof is by induction on ''n''. The basis is n=1. In this case, B_n is the interval 1,1/math> and its boundary is the set \. The labeling ''L'' is boundary-odd, so L(-1)=-L(+1). Without loss of generality, assume that L(-1)=-1 and L(+1)=+1. Start at −1 and go right. At some edge ''e'', the labeling must change from negative to positive. Since ''L'' has no complementary edges, ''e'' must have a negative label and a positive label with a different size (e.g. −1 and +2); this means that ''e'' is a 1-dimensional alternating simplex. Moreover, if at any point the labeling changes again from positive to negative, then this change makes a second alternating simplex, and by the same reasoning as before there must be a third alternating simplex later. Hence, the number of alternating simplices is odd. The following description illustrates the induction step for n=2. In this case B_n is a disc and its boundary is a circle. The labeling ''L'' is boundary-odd, so in particular L(-v) = -L(v) for some point ''v'' on the boundary. Split the boundary circle to two semi-circles and treat each semi-circle as an interval. By the induction basis, this interval must have an alternating simplex, e.g. an edge with labels (+1,−2). Moreover, the number of such edges on both intervals is odd. Using the boundary criterion, on the boundary we have an odd number of edges where the smaller number is positive and the larger negative, and an odd number of edges where the smaller number is negative and the larger positive. We call the former ''decreasing'', the latter ''increasing''. There are two kinds of triangles. * If a triangle is not alternating, it must have an even number of increasing edges and an even number of decreasing edges. * If a triangle is alternating, it must have one increasing edge and one decreasing edge, thus we have an odd number of alternating triangles. By induction, this proof can be extended to any dimension.


References

{{reflist Combinatorics Lemmas Fixed points (mathematics)