Смекни!
smekni.com

Matroid maps (стр. 2 из 2)

connecting the chambers u and v. Let now the chamber x moves along

Matroid mapsfrom u to v, then the corresponding residue
Matroid mapsmoves from
Matroid mapsto
Matroid maps. Since the geodesic gallery
Matroid mapsintersects every wall no more than once [5, Lemma 2.5], the chamber x crosses each wall
Matroid mapsin
Matroid mapsno more than once and, if it crosses
Matroid maps, it moves from the same side of
Matroid mapsas u to the opposite side. But, by the assumptions of the theorem, this means that the residue
Matroid mapscrosses each wall
Matroid mapsno more than once and moves from the side of
Matroid mapsopposite u to the side containing u. But, by the geometric interpretation of the Bruhat order, this means [2, Theorem 5.7] that
Matroid mapsdecreases, with respect to the u-Bruhat order, at every such step, and we ultimately obtain
Matroid maps

Списоклитературы

Borovik A.V., Gelfand I.M. WP-matroids and thin Schubert cells on Tits systems // Advances Math. 1994. V.103. N.1. P.162-179.

Borovik A.V., Roberts K.S. Coxeter groups and matroids, in Groups of Lie Type and Geometries, W. M. Kantor and L. Di Martino, eds. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, 1995 (London Math. Soc. Lect. Notes Ser. V.207) P.13-34.

Gale D., Optimal assignments in an ordered set: an application of matroid theory // J. Combinatorial Theory. 1968. V.4. P.1073-1082.

Gelfand I.M., Serganova V.V. Combinatorial geometries and torus strata on homogeneous compact manifolds // Russian Math. Surveys. 1987. V.42. P.133-168.

Ronan M. Lectures on Buildings - Academic Press. Boston. 1989.

Tits J. A local approach to buildings, in The Geometric Vein (Coxeter Festschrift) Springer-Verlag, New York a.o., 1981. P.317-322.