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JOURNALS // Trudy Matematicheskogo Instituta imeni V.A. Steklova // Archive

Trudy Mat. Inst. Steklova, 2015 Volume 288, Pages 224–229 (Mi tm3597)

$(n,m)$-fold covers of spheres

Imre Bárányab, Ruy Fabila-Monroyc, Birgit Vogtenhuberd

a Department of Mathematics, University College London, UK
b Alfréd Rényi Institute of Mathematics, Hungary Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
c Departamento de Matemáticas, Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politécnico Nacional (CINVESTAV), México, D.F. CP 07360, México
d Institute for Software Technology, Graz University of Technology, Graz, Austria

Abstract: A well-known consequence of the Borsuk–Ulam theorem is that if the $d$-dimensional sphere $S^d$ is covered with less than $d+2$ open sets, then there is a set containing a pair of antipodal points. In this paper we provide lower and upper bounds on the minimum number of open sets, not containing a pair of antipodal points, needed to cover the $d$-dimensional sphere $n$ times, with the additional property that the northern hemisphere is covered $m>n$ times. We prove that if the open northern hemisphere is to be covered $m$ times, then at least $\lceil(d-1)/2\rceil+n+m$ and at most $d+n+m$ sets are needed. For the case of $n=1$ and $d\ge2$, this number is equal to $d+2$ if $m\le\lfloor d/2\rfloor+1$ and equal to $\lfloor(d-1)/2\rfloor+2+m$ if $m>\lfloor d/2\rfloor+1$. If the closed northern hemisphere is to be covered $m$ times, then $d+2m-1$ sets are needed; this number is also sufficient. We also present results on a related problem of independent interest. We prove that if $S^d$ is covered $n$ times with open sets not containing a pair of antipodal points, then there exists a point that is covered at least $\lceil d/2\rceil+n$ times. Furthermore, we show that there are covers in which no point is covered more than $n+d$ times.

UDC: 515.1

Received in September 2014

Language: English

DOI: 10.1134/S037196851501015X


 English version:
Proceedings of the Steklov Institute of Mathematics, 2015, 288, 203–208

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