@article{9652, abstract = {In 1998 Burago and Kleiner and (independently) McMullen gave examples of separated nets in Euclidean space which are non-bilipschitz equivalent to the integer lattice. We study weaker notions of equivalence of separated nets and demonstrate that such notions also give rise to distinct equivalence classes. Put differently, we find occurrences of particularly strong divergence of separated nets from the integer lattice. Our approach generalises that of Burago and Kleiner and McMullen which takes place largely in a continuous setting. Existence of irregular separated nets is verified via the existence of non-realisable density functions ρ:[0,1]d→(0,∞). In the present work we obtain stronger types of non-realisable densities.}, author = {Dymond, Michael and Kaluza, Vojtech}, issn = {1565-8511}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, keywords = {Lipschitz, bilipschitz, bounded displacement, modulus of continuity, separated net, non-realisable density, Burago--Kleiner construction}, pages = {501--554}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Highly irregular separated nets}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-022-2448-6}, volume = {253}, year = {2023}, } @article{14444, abstract = {We prove several results about substructures in Latin squares. First, we explain how to adapt our recent work on high-girth Steiner triple systems to the setting of Latin squares, resolving a conjecture of Linial that there exist Latin squares with arbitrarily high girth. As a consequence, we see that the number of order- n Latin squares with no intercalate (i.e., no 2×2 Latin subsquare) is at least (e−9/4n−o(n))n2. Equivalently, P[N=0]≥e−n2/4−o(n2)=e−(1+o(1))EN , where N is the number of intercalates in a uniformly random order- n Latin square. In fact, extending recent work of Kwan, Sah, and Sawhney, we resolve the general large-deviation problem for intercalates in random Latin squares, up to constant factors in the exponent: for any constant 0<δ≤1 we have P[N≤(1−δ)EN]=exp(−Θ(n2)) and for any constant δ>0 we have P[N≥(1+δ)EN]=exp(−Θ(n4/3logn)). Finally, as an application of some new general tools for studying substructures in random Latin squares, we show that in almost all order- n Latin squares, the number of cuboctahedra (i.e., the number of pairs of possibly degenerate 2×2 submatrices with the same arrangement of symbols) is of order n4, which is the minimum possible. As observed by Gowers and Long, this number can be interpreted as measuring ``how associative'' the quasigroup associated with the Latin square is.}, author = {Kwan, Matthew Alan and Sah, Ashwin and Sawhney, Mehtaab and Simkin, Michael}, issn = {1565-8511}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, number = {2}, pages = {363--416}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Substructures in Latin squares}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-023-2513-9}, volume = {256}, year = {2023}, } @article{14445, abstract = {We prove the following quantitative Borsuk–Ulam-type result (an equivariant analogue of Gromov’s Topological Overlap Theorem): Let X be a free ℤ/2-complex of dimension d with coboundary expansion at least ηk in dimension 0 ≤ k < d. Then for every equivariant map F: X →ℤ/2 ℝd, the fraction of d-simplices σ of X with 0 ∈ F (σ) is at least 2−d Π d−1k=0ηk. As an application, we show that for every sufficiently thick d-dimensional spherical building Y and every map f: Y → ℝ2d, we have f(σ) ∩ f(τ) ≠ ∅ for a constant fraction μd > 0 of pairs {σ, τ} of d-simplices of Y. In particular, such complexes are non-embeddable into ℝ2d, which proves a conjecture of Tancer and Vorwerk for sufficiently thick spherical buildings. We complement these results by upper bounds on the coboundary expansion of two families of simplicial complexes; this indicates some limitations to the bounds one can obtain by straighforward applications of the quantitative Borsuk–Ulam theorem. Specifically, we prove • an upper bound of (d + 1)/2d on the normalized (d − 1)-th coboundary expansion constant of complete (d + 1)-partite d-dimensional complexes (under a mild divisibility assumption on the sizes of the parts); and • an upper bound of (d + 1)/2d + ε on the normalized (d − 1)-th coboundary expansion of the d-dimensional spherical building associated with GLd+2(Fq) for any ε > 0 and sufficiently large q. This disproves, in a rather strong sense, a conjecture of Lubotzky, Meshulam and Mozes.}, author = {Wagner, Uli and Wild, Pascal}, issn = {1565-8511}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, number = {2}, pages = {675--717}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Coboundary expansion, equivariant overlap, and crossing numbers of simplicial complexes}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-023-2521-9}, volume = {256}, year = {2023}, } @article{10220, abstract = {We study conditions under which a finite simplicial complex K can be mapped to ℝd without higher-multiplicity intersections. An almost r-embedding is a map f: K → ℝd such that the images of any r pairwise disjoint simplices of K do not have a common point. We show that if r is not a prime power and d ≥ 2r + 1, then there is a counterexample to the topological Tverberg conjecture, i.e., there is an almost r-embedding of the (d +1)(r − 1)-simplex in ℝd. This improves on previous constructions of counterexamples (for d ≥ 3r) based on a series of papers by M. Özaydin, M. Gromov, P. Blagojević, F. Frick, G. Ziegler, and the second and fourth present authors. The counterexamples are obtained by proving the following algebraic criterion in codimension 2: If r ≥ 3 and if K is a finite 2(r − 1)-complex, then there exists an almost r-embedding K → ℝ2r if and only if there exists a general position PL map f: K → ℝ2r such that the algebraic intersection number of the f-images of any r pairwise disjoint simplices of K is zero. This result can be restated in terms of a cohomological obstruction and extends an analogous codimension 3 criterion by the second and fourth authors. As another application, we classify ornaments f: S3 ⊔ S3 ⊔ S3 → ℝ5 up to ornament concordance. It follows from work of M. Freedman, V. Krushkal and P. Teichner that the analogous criterion for r = 2 is false. We prove a lemma on singular higher-dimensional Borromean rings, yielding an elementary proof of the counterexample.}, author = {Avvakumov, Sergey and Mabillard, Isaac and Skopenkov, Arkadiy B. and Wagner, Uli}, issn = {1565-8511}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, pages = {501–534 }, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Eliminating higher-multiplicity intersections. III. Codimension 2}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-021-2216-z}, volume = {245}, year = {2021}, } @article{9578, abstract = {How long a monotone path can one always find in any edge-ordering of the complete graph Kn? This appealing question was first asked by Chvátal and Komlós in 1971, and has since attracted the attention of many researchers, inspiring a variety of related problems. The prevailing conjecture is that one can always find a monotone path of linear length, but until now the best known lower bound was n2/3-o(1). In this paper we almost close this gap, proving that any edge-ordering of the complete graph contains a monotone path of length n1-o(1).}, author = {Bucić, Matija and Kwan, Matthew Alan and Pokrovskiy, Alexey and Sudakov, Benny and Tran, Tuan and Wagner, Adam Zsolt}, issn = {1565-8511}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, number = {2}, pages = {663--685}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Nearly-linear monotone paths in edge-ordered graphs}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-020-2035-7}, volume = {238}, year = {2020}, } @article{9580, abstract = {An r-cut of a k-uniform hypergraph H is a partition of the vertex set of H into r parts and the size of the cut is the number of edges which have a vertex in each part. A classical result of Edwards says that every m-edge graph has a 2-cut of size m/2+Ω)(m−−√) and this is best possible. That is, there exist cuts which exceed the expected size of a random cut by some multiple of the standard deviation. We study analogues of this and related results in hypergraphs. First, we observe that similarly to graphs, every m-edge k-uniform hypergraph has an r-cut whose size is Ω(m−−√) larger than the expected size of a random r-cut. Moreover, in the case where k = 3 and r = 2 this bound is best possible and is attained by Steiner triple systems. Surprisingly, for all other cases (that is, if k ≥ 4 or r ≥ 3), we show that every m-edge k-uniform hypergraph has an r-cut whose size is Ω(m5/9) larger than the expected size of a random r-cut. This is a significant difference in behaviour, since the amount by which the size of the largest cut exceeds the expected size of a random cut is now considerably larger than the standard deviation.}, author = {Conlon, David and Fox, Jacob and Kwan, Matthew Alan and Sudakov, Benny}, issn = {1565-8511}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, number = {1}, pages = {67--111}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Hypergraph cuts above the average}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-019-1897-z}, volume = {233}, year = {2019}, }