Abstract |
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An N-dimensional
real representation E of a
finite group G is said to have
the “Borsuk–Ulam Property” if any continuous
G-map from the (N + 1)-fold join of G (an N-complex
equipped with the diagonal G-action)
to E has a zero. This happens
iff the “Van Kampen characteristic class” of
E is nonzero, so using standard
computations one can explicitly characterize representations
having the B-U property. As an application we obtain the
“continuous” Tverberg theorem for all prime powers
q, i.e., that some q disjoint faces of a (q −
1)(d + 1)-dimensional simplex must
intersect under any continuous map from it into afine
d-space. The “classical”
Tverberg, which makes the same assertion for all linear maps, but
for all q, is explained in our
set-up by the fact that any representation E has the analogously defined
“linear B-U property” iff it does not contain
the trivial representation.
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Authors
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