The worst way to collapse a simplex

Abstract

In general a contractible complex need not be collapsible. Moreover, there exist complexes which are collapsible but even so admit a collapsing sequence where one "gets stuck", that is one can choose the collapses in such a way that one arrives at a nontrivial complex which admits no collapsing moves. Here we examine this phenomenon in the case of a simplex. In particular we characterize all values of n and d so that the n-simplex may collapse to a d-complex from which no further collapses are possible. Equivalently and in the language of high-dimensional generalizations of trees, we construct hypertrees that are anticollapsible, but not collapsible. Furthermore we examine anticollapsibility in random simplicial complexes.

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