Abstract

The weight of a face in a 3-polytope is the degree-sum of its incident vertices, and the weight of a 3-polytope, w, is the minimum weight of its faces. A face is pyramidal if it is either a 4-face incident with three 3-vertices, or a 3-face incident with two vertices of degree at most 4. If pyramidal faces are allowed, then w can be arbitrarily large, so we assume the absence of pyramidal faces in what follows.In 1940, Lebesgue proved that every quadrangulated 3-polytope has w≤21. In 1995, this bound was lowered by Avgustinovich and Borodin to 20. Recently, we improved it to the sharp bound 18.For plane triangulations without 4-vertices, Borodin (1992), confirming the Kotzig conjecture of 1979, proved that w≤29, which bound is sharp. Later, Borodin (1998) proved that w≤29 for all triangulated 3-polytopes. Recently, we obtained the sharp bound 20 for triangle-free polytopes.In 1996, Horňák and Jendrol’ proved for arbitrarily polytopes that w≤32. In this paper we improve this bound to 30 and construct a polytope with w=30.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call