An update on the Hirsch conjecture
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2010-06-03Derechos
Atribución-NoComercial 3.0 España
Publicado en
Jahresbericht der Deutschen Mathematiker-Vereinigung, 2010, 112(2), 73-98
Editorial
Springer Verlag
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Palabras clave
Graph diameter
Hirsch conjecture
Linear programming
Polytopes
Resumen/Abstract
The Hirsch conjecture was posed in 1957 in a question from Warren M.
Hirsch to George Dantzig. It states that the graph of a d-dimensional polytope with
n facets cannot have diameter greater than n − d. The number n of facets is the minimum
number of closed half-spaces needed to form the polytope and the conjecture
asserts that one can go from any vertex to any other vertex using at most n−d edges.
Despite being one of the most fundamental, basic and old problems in polytope
theory, what we know is quite scarce. Most notably, no polynomial upper bound
is known for the diameters that are conjectured to be linear. In contrast, very few
polytopes are known where the bound n − d is attained. This paper collects known
results and remarks both on the positive and on the negative side of the conjecture.
Some proofs are included, but only those that we hope are accessible to a general
mathematical audience without introducing too many technicalities
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