Klara Stokes: Pentagonal geometries - an alternative way to generalise the pentagon
Klara Stokes, Linköping University
Time: Wed 2014-01-22 10.15 - 12.00
Location: Room 3418, 4th floor, Department of Mathematics, KTH
Partial linear spaces are combinatorial arrangements of points and
lines. A generalised polygon is a partial linear space such that its
bipartite incidence graph has girth twice its diameter, just like for
ordinary polygons - the incidence graph of the ordinary n-gon is the
cyclic graph on 2n vertices. By the Feit-Higman Theorem, a
(non-degenerate) generalised polygon has diameter n either 3, 4, 6, or
8. In particular there are no generalised pentagons or generalised
heptagons. In this talk I will describe an alternative way of
generalising the pentagon: the pentagonal geometries. A pentagonal
geometry is a partial linear space in which for all points p, the points
not collinear with the point p, form a line. I will talk about available
constructions, some non-existence results, a connection with
distance-regular graphs and embeddings on Riemann surfaces.
