-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
Copy pathpoly.tex
637 lines (490 loc) · 26.4 KB
/
poly.tex
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
\csname @openrightfalse\endcsname
\chapter{Piecewise linear geometry}
A \index{polyhedral space}\emph{polyhedral space} is a complete length-metric space that admits a locally finite triangulation
such that each simplex is isometric to a simplex in a Euclidean space.
By a {}\emph{triangulation} of a polyhedral space, we always mean a triangulation of that type.
A point in a polyhedral space is called \index{regular point}\emph{regular} if it has a neighborhood isometric to an open set in a Euclidean space;
otherwise, it is called {}\emph{singular}.
If we replace the Euclidean spaces by the unit spheres or the hyperbolic spaces,
we arrive at the definition of {}\emph{spherical} and {}\emph{hyperbolic polyhedral spaces} respectively.
The term \index{piecewise}\emph{piecewise} typically means that there is a triangulation with some property on each triangle.
For example, if $P$ and $Q$ are polyhedral spaces, then
\begin{itemize}
\item a map $f\:P\to Q$ is called {}\emph{piecewise distance-preserving} if there is a triangulation $\mathcal{T}$ of $P$ such that for any simplex $\Delta\in \mathcal{T}$ the restriction $f|_\Delta$ is distance-preserving;
\item a map $h\:P\z\to Q$ is called {}\emph{piecewise linear} if both spaces $P$ and $Q$ admit triangulations such that each simplex of $P$ is mapped to a simplex of $Q$ by an affine map.
In particular, a {}\emph{piecewise linear homeomorphism} is a piecewise linear map which is a homeomorphism.\label{piecewise linear map}
\end{itemize}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Spherical arm lemma}\label{Spherical arm lemma}
Recall that a polygon without self-intersections is called \index{simple polygon}\emph{simple}.
\begin{pr}
Let $A=[a_1\dots a_n]$ and $B=[b_1\dots b_n]$ be two simple spherical polygons
with equal corresponding sides.
Assume that $A$ lies in a hemisphere and $\measuredangle a_i\ge\measuredangle b_i$ for each $i$.
Show that $A$ is congruent to $B$.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parit{Semisolution.}
Cut out $A$ from the sphere and glue $B$ in its place.
Denote by $\Sigma$ the obtained spherical polyhedral space.
Note that
\begin{itemize}
\item $\Sigma$ is homeomorphic to $\mathbb S^2$.
\item $\Sigma$ has curvature $\ge 1$ in the sense of Alexandrov; that is, the total angle around each singular point is less than $2\cdot \pi$.
\item All the singular points of $\Sigma$
lie outside of an isometric copy of a hemisphere $\mathbb{S}^2_+\subset \Sigma$.
\end{itemize}
Denote by $n$ the number of singular points in $\Sigma$.
It is sufficient to show that $n=0$.
Assume the contrary; that is, $n\ge 1$.
We can assume that $n$ takes the minimal possible value.
Clearly, $n>1$;
that is, $\Sigma$ cannot have a single singular point.
Therefore we can choose two singular points $p,q\in \Sigma$.
Cut $\Sigma$ along a geodesic $[pq]$.
The obtained hole can be patched so that we obtain a new polyhedral space $\Sigma'$ of the same type but with $n-1$ singular points.
Since $n$ is minimal, we arrive at a contradiction.
Namely, if the total angles around $p$ and $q$ are $2\cdot \pi-\alpha$ and $2\cdot \pi-\beta$ respectively,
consider the spherical triangle $\triangle$ with the base $|p\z-q|_\Sigma$ and the adjacent angles $\tfrac\alpha2$, $\tfrac\beta2$.
The needed patch is obtained by doubling $\triangle$ along its lateral sides.
\qeds
\parit{Alternative end of the proof.}
By the Alexandrov embedding theorem, $\Sigma$ is isometric to the surface of a convex polyhedron $P$ in the unit sphere $\mathbb S^3$.
The center of the hemisphere has to lie in a facet of $P$, say $F$.
It remains to note that $F$ contains the equator and therefore $P$ has to be a hemisphere in $\mathbb S^3$ or an intersection of two hemispheres.
In both cases, its surface is isometric to $\mathbb S^2$.
\qeds
The problem is due to Victor Zalgaller \cite{zalgaller-shperical-polygon};
the result of Victor Toponogov in \cite{toponogov} gives a smooth analog of this statement.
The patch construction above was introduced by
Aleksandr Alexandrov
in his proof of convex embeddability of polyhedra
\cite[see VI, \S7 in][]{alexandrov1948}.
The alternative end of the proof is taken from \cite{panov-petrunin}.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Triangulation of 3-sphere}\label{4-poly}
\begin{pr}
Construct a triangulation of $\mathbb{S}^3$
with $100$ vertices
such that any two vertices are connected by an edge.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Folding problem}\label{Folding problem}
\begin{pr}
Let $P$ be a compact $2$-dimensional
polyhedral space.
Construct a
piecewise distance-preserving map
$f\:P\to \RR^2$.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Piecewise distance-preserving extension}\label{iso-kirzhbraun}
\begin{pr}
Prove that any 1-Lipschitz map from a finite subset $F\subset \RR^2$
to
$\RR^2$ can be extended to a
piecewise distance-preserving map
$\RR^2\to\RR^2$.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Closed polyhedral surface}\label{Closed polyhedral surface}
\begin{pr}
Construct a closed polyhedral surface $\Sigma$ in $\RR^3$ with nonpositive curvature;
that is, the total angle around each vertex of $\Sigma$ is at least~$2\cdot\pi$.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Minimal polyhedral disk}\label{Minimal polyhedral disk}
By a polyhedral disk in $\RR^3$
we mean a triangulation of a plane polygon $P$ with a map $P\to\RR^3$ that is affine on each triangle.
The area of the polyhedral disk is defined as the sum of areas of the images of the triangles in the triangulation.
\begin{pr}
Consider the class of polyhedral disks glued from $n$ triangles in $\RR^3$
with a fixed broken line as the boundary.
Let $\Sigma_n$ be a disk of minimal area in this class.
Show that $\Sigma_n$ is a \index{saddle surface}\emph{saddle surface};
that is, a plane cannot cut all the edges coming from one of the interior vertices of~$\Sigma_n$.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Coherent triangulation\easy}\label{Coherent triangulation}
A triangulation of a convex polygon is called coherent if there is a convex function that is linear on each triangle and changes its gradient on every edge of the triangulation.
\begin{pr}
Find a non-coherent triangulation of a triangle.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Sphere with one edge\hard}\label{panov-S^3}
\begin{pr}
Construct a polyhedral space that is homeomorphic to $\mathbb{S}^3$ and such that its singular locus is formed by a circle.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{Triangulation of a torus}\label{Triangulation of a torus}
\begin{pr}
Show that the torus does not admit a triangulation
such that one vertex has 5 edges,
one has 7 edges and
all other vertices have
6 edges.
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\subsection*{No simple geodesics\easy}\label{No simple geodesics}
\begin{pr}
Construct a convex polyhedron $P$ whose surface
does not have a closed simple geodesic.
\end{pr}
\section*{Semisolutions}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Triangulation of 3-sphere.}
Choose 100 distinct points $p_1\z\dots,p_{100}$
on the {}\emph{moment curve}
\[\gamma\:t\mapsto (t,t^2,t^3,t^4)\]
in $\RR^4$.
Denote by $P$ the convex hull of $\{p_1,\z\dots,p_{100}\}$.
The surface of $P$ is homeomorphic to $\mathbb{S}^2$.
Therefore it is sufficient to show that any two vertices of $P$ are connected by an edge.
The latter follows from the following claim.
\begin{cl}{$({*})$}
Given two points $p$ and $q$ on $\gamma$, there is a hyperplane $H$ in $\RR^4$ that intersects $\gamma$ only at $p$ and $q$ and leaves $\gamma$ on one side.
\end{cl}
To prove the claim, assume that $p=\gamma(t_1)$ and $q=\gamma(t_2)$.
Consider the polynomial
\[f(t)=a+b\cdot t+c\cdot t^2+d\cdot t^3+t^4=(t-t_1)^2\cdot(t-t_2)^2.\]
Clearly, $f(t)\ge 0$, and the equality holds only at $t_1$ and $t_2$.
It follows that the affine function $\ell\:\RR^4\to\RR$ defined by
\[\ell\:(w,x,y,z)\mapsto a+b\cdot w+c\cdot x+d\cdot y+z\]
is nonnegative at the points of $\gamma$ and vanishes only at $p$ and $q$.
Therefore the zero-set of $\ell$ is the required hyperplane $H$ in $({*})$.
\qeds
The polyhedron $P$ above is an example of the so-called \index{cyclic polytope}\emph{cyclic polytopes}.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Folding problem.}
Given a triangulation of $P$,
consider the Voronoi domain $V_v$ for each vertex $v$;
that is, $V_v$ is the set of all points in $P$ closer to $v$ than to any other vertex.
Note that the triangulation can be subdivided if necessary
so that the Voronoi domain of each vertex is isometric to a convex subset in the cone with the vertex at its tip.
The boundaries of all the Voronoi domains form a graph with straight edges.
Let us triangulate $P$ so that each triangle has one of those edges as the base
and the opposite vertex is the center of an adjacent Voronoi domain;
such a vertex will be called the {}\emph{main} vertex of the triangle.
\begin{wrapfigure}[7]{o}{47 mm}
\vskip-0mm
\centering
\includegraphics{mppics/pic-802}
\end{wrapfigure}
Choose a solid triangle $\triangle=[vab]$ in the constructed triangulation;
let $v$ be its main vertex.
Given a point
$x\in \triangle$, set
\begin{align*}
\rho(x)&=|x-v|
\intertext{and}
\theta(x)&=\min \{\measuredangle \hinge vax,\measuredangle\hinge vbx\}.
\end{align*}
Let us map $x$ to the point with polar coordinates $(\rho(x),\theta(x))$ in the plane.
Note that for each triangle $\triangle$,
the constructed map $\triangle\to\RR^2$ is piecewise distance-preserving.
It remains to check that these maps agree on the common sides of the triangles.
\qeds
This construction was given by Victor Zalgaller \cite{zalgaller-polyhedra}.
Svetlana Krat generalized the statement to higher dimensions \cite{krat}.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Piecewise distance-preserving extension.}
Let $a_1,\dots,a_n$
and $b_1,\z\dots,b_n$
be two collections of points in $\RR^2$
such that
\[|a_i-a_j|\ge |b_i-b_j|\]
for all pairs $i$, $j$.
We need to construct a piecewise distance-preserving map $f\:\RR^2\to\RR^2$
such that $f(a_i)=b_i$ for each $i$.
Assume that the problem is already solved for $n<m$;
let us do the case $n=m$.
By assumption,
there is a piecewise linear length-preserving map $f\:\RR^2\to\RR^2$
such that $f(a_i)=b_i$ for each $i>1$.
Consider the set
\[\Omega=\set{x\in\RR^2}{|f(x)-b_1|>|x-a_1|}.\]
Since $|a_i-a_1|\ge|b_i-b_1|$, we get $a_i\notin \Omega$ for $i>1$.
Note that we can assume that the map $f$ and therefore the set $\Omega$ are bounded.
Indeed, let $\square$ be a square containing all the points $b_i$.
There is a piecewise isometric map $h\:\RR^2\to\square$ obtained by folding plane along the lines of the grid defined by $\square$.
Then the composition $h\circ f$ is bounded and it satisfies all the properties of $f$ described above.
If $\Omega=\emptyset$,
then $f(a_1)=b_1$;
that is, $f$ is a solution.
It remains to consider the case $\Omega\ne\emptyset$.
Note that $\Omega$ is star-shaped with respect to $a_1$.
Indeed, if $x\in \Omega$, then $|a_1-x|<|b_1-f(x)|$.
If $y\in [a_1x]$ then
$|a_1-y|+|y-x|=|a_1-x|$ and since $f$ is length-preserving we get $|f(x)-f(y)|\le |x-y|$.
By the triangle inequality,
$|a_1-y|<|b_1-f(y)|$; that is, $y\in\Omega$.
\begin{wrapfigure}{o}{47 mm}
\vskip-1mm
\centering
\includegraphics{mppics/pic-804}
\vskip-1mm
\end{wrapfigure}
The boundary $\partial\Omega$ can be subdivided into a finite collection of line segments $\{E_i\}$
so that $f$ maps rigidly each $E_i$.
Note that
\[|f(x)\z-b_1|=|x-a_1|\]
for any $x\in E_i$.
Denote by $T_i$ the triangle with the base $E_i$ and the vertex $a_1$.
From the above, there is a rigid motion $m_i$ of $T_i$ such that $m_i(x)\z=f(x)$ for any $x\in E_i$ and $m_i(a_1)=b_1$.
Let us redefine the map $f$ in $\Omega$ by sending $x$ to $m_i(x)$ for any $x\in T_i$.
The maps $m_i$ agree on the common sides of triangles $T_i$.
Therefore we have produced a new piecewise isometric map $f'\:\RR^2\to \RR^2$ satisfying all the requirements.
\qeds
The same proof works in all dimensions.
The statement was proved by Ulrich Brehm
and rediscovered by Arseniy Akopyan and Alexey Tarasov [see \ncite{brehm}, \ncite{akopyan-tarasov}, and Section 2 in \ncite{petrunin-yashinsky}].
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Closed polyhedral surface.}
An example can be constructed by drilling a polyhedral cave in your favorite convex polyhedron.
On the diagram, you see the result of this construction for the octahedron.
{
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{43 mm}
\vskip-2mm
\centering
\includegraphics{asy/kedra}
\bigskip
\includegraphics{asy/kedra-torus}
\end{wrapfigure}
\medskip
Choose a convex polyhedron $K$.
We can assume that the interior of $K$ contains the origin $0\in\RR^3$.
Remove from $K$ the interior of $K'=\tfrac45\cdot K$.
Note that one can drill from each vertex of $K$ a polyhedral tunnel to the corresponding vertex of $K'$
so that the surface $\Sigma$ of the obtained non-convex polytope is a solution.
\qeds
The problem suggested by Jaros{\l}aw K\k{e}dra.
The given construction above produces a surface of genus at least 3.
Another example shown on the diagram is isometric to a flat torus.
It is a bent version of the so-called \index{Schwarz boot}\emph{Schwarz boot} \cite{schwarz1890definition}.
It is made by joining a few identical cylinders, each made from six triangles.
The existence of such a torus also follows from a general result of Yuri Burago and Victor Zalgaller \cite{burago-zalgaller:pl}.
They show in particular that any 1-Lipschitz smooth embedding of the flat torus in $\RR^3$ can be approximated by a piecewise distance-preserving embedding.
}
The following related problem was proposed by Brian Bowditch.
\begin{pr}
Construct a polyhedral metric on the 3-sphere such that the total angle around any edge of its triangulation is at least $2\cdot\pi$.
\end{pr}
A solution can be built using the construction of Joel Hass \cite{hass}.
Another solution was given by Karim Adiprasito \cite{adiprasito};
he proved that an example can be found among spaces that admit a cubulation into unit cubes.
One can also show that it is impossible to find such an example by starting with a doubled cube (as well as other simple polyhedral metrics on the sphere) and passing to coverings branching along unknots а finite number of times.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Minimal polyhedral disk.}
Arguing by contradiction,
assume that a polyhedral disk $\Sigma$ minimizing the area is not saddle;
that is, there is an interior vertex $v$ of $\Sigma$ such that all the edges from $v$ can be cut with a plane.
Note that we can move $v$ in such a way that the lengths of all its edges decrease.
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{43 mm}
\vskip0mm
\centering
\includegraphics{mppics/pic-806}
\end{wrapfigure}
Since the area is minimal, this deformation does not decrease the area.
Taking the derivative of the total area along this deformation implies that $\Sigma$
contains two adjacent non-coplanar triangles $[pvw]$ and $[qvw]$ such that
\[\measuredangle \hinge pvw+\measuredangle \hinge qvw> \pi.\]
In this case, replacing the triangles $[pvw]$ and $[qvw]$
by the triangles $[vpq]$ and $[wpq]$
leads to a polyhedral surface with a smaller area.
That is, $\Sigma$ is not area-minimizing --- a contradiction.
\qeds
{
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{43 mm}
\vskip-8mm
\centering
\includegraphics{asy/tent}
\end{wrapfigure}
For a general polyhedral surface, a deformation decreasing the lengths of all edges may not decrease the area.
Moreover, the surface that minimizes the area among all surfaces with a fixed triangulation might not be saddle;
the symmetric tent shown on the diagram provides an example [see \ncite{petrunin-monthly} for more details].
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Coherent triangulation.}
An example is shown on the diagram.
The triangulation of the triangle $[x'y'z']$ has a homothetic triangle $[xyz]$ and the edges
$[xx']$, $[yy']$, $[zz']$,
$[yx']$, $[zy']$, $[xz']$.
}
\medskip
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{33 mm}
\vskip0mm
\centering
\includegraphics{mppics/pic-808}
\end{wrapfigure}
Assume this triangulation is coherent;
let $f$ be the corresponding piecewise linear convex function.
Without loss of generality, we can assume that $f$ vanishes on the boundary of the big triangle.
From the convexity of $f$ at the edges $[x'y]$, $[y'z]$, and $[z'x]$, we get
\[f(x)>f(y)>f(z)>f(x)\]
--- a contradiction.
\qeds
The problem is discussed in the book of
Israel Gelfand,
Mikhail Kapranov,
and Andrei Zelevinsky \cite[see 7C in][]{GKZ}.
The given example is closely related to the so-called \index{Schönhardt polyhedron}\emph{Schönhardt polyhedron}, an example of a non-convex polyhedron that does not admit a triangulation \cite{schoenhardt}.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Sphere with one edge.}
An example can be found among flat orbifolds;
in other words, the required polyhedral space can be chosen to be a quotient of $\mathbb{R}^3$ by a crystallographic action.
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{23 mm}
\vskip-4mm
\centering
\includegraphics{asy/P213}
\end{wrapfigure}
\medskip
Consider the action on $\mathbb{R}^3$ generated by order-3 rotations around two diagonals of the cubes shown on the diagram.
Note that this action is crystallographic;
in fact, it preserves the cubical grid.
Therefore the quotient of $\mathbb{R}^3$ by this action, say $P$, is a compact polyhedral space.
For the described action,
the isotropy group of any point is either trivial or has order 3.
Therefore any point in $P$ admits a neighborhood that is isometric to an open set either in $\RR^3$ or $\RR^3/\ZZ_3$.
Both of these spaces are topological 3-manifolds;
therefore, $P$ is a 3-dimensional manifold as well.
Note that $P$ is simply-connected;
this follows since the action is generated by rotations.
By the Poincaré conjecture, $P$ is a topological sphere.
The singular locus of $P$ is the image of the axes of all the order-3 rotations.
Note that the action is transitive on the set of all these axes.
It follows that the singular locus $P_s$ of $P$ is connected; that is, $P_s$ is a circle.
\medskip
This is the so-called P$2_13$ action.
Among 219 crystallographic actions, this is the only one with the quotient space that has the required property; see \cite{dunbar}.
Note that a 3-fold covering of $P$ that is branching in $P_s$ is a flat manifold.
In particular, this covering is \emph{not} simply-connected.
Therefore $P_s$ is \emph{not} a trivial knot;
it is, in fact, the figure-eight knot.
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{23 mm}
\vskip-4mm
\centering
\includegraphics{asy/thurston-cube}
\vskip-4mm
\end{wrapfigure}
There are a few crystallographic actions with singular locus formed by links.
The simplest is the Borromean rings;
it is the singular locus of a flat orbifold obtained by gluing each face of a cube to itself
along the reflections with respect to the middle lines shown on the picture; the corresponding action is called I$2_12_12_1$.
Other examples (nonorbifold, spherical, hyperbolic) are discussed by Michel Boileau and Joan Porti \cite[Chapter 9]{boileau-porti};
more examples are given by Alexander Mednykh \cite{mednykh}.
I get intrigued by this problem because of the following connection:
spaces of directions in 4-dimensional polyhedral Kähler manifolds
are 3-spheres with a spherical polyhedral metric with a singular locus formed by a knot or link.
In addition, these spaces have an isometric $\RR$-action induced by the complex structure.
Polyhedral Kähler manifolds admit a natural stratification into flat manifolds of even codimensions.
So the existence problem of polyhedral Kähler metrics on a given manifold or with a given stratification might be considered as a higher-dimensional analog of the original problem.
A polyhedral metric on a manifold is called \index{polyhedral Kähler manifold}\emph{Kähler} if it comes with a complex structure on each simplex of maximal dimension that agrees on each simplex of codimension 1 (plus a minor condition).
This class of spaces was defined and studied by Dmitri Panov \cite{panov-Kaeler}.
In particular, he constructed many examples of polyhedral Kähler metrics on
$\CP^2$ ---
try to construct one, it is not that easy.
The following problem is completely open:
\begin{pr}
Is it possible to approximate the canonical metric on $\CP^2$ by polyhedral metrics with nonnegative curvature in the sense of Alexandrov?
\end{pr}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{Triangulation of a torus.}
Assume the contrary;
let $\tau$ be a triangulation of the torus with the vertex $z_5$ meeting $5$ triangles,
vertex $z_7$ meeting $7$ triangles,
and every other vertex meeting $6$ triangles.
Let us equip the torus with the flat metric such that each triangle is equilateral.
The metric will have two singular cone points $z_5$ and $z_7$.
The total angle around $z_5$ is $\tfrac53\cdot\pi$
and the total angle around $z_7$ is $\tfrac73\cdot\pi$.
Note that
\begin{cl}{$({*})$}
the holonomy group of the obtained polyhedral metric on the torus is generated by the rotation by $\tfrac\pi3$.
\end{cl}
Indeed, since parallel translation along any loop preserves the directions of the sides of any triangle;
it can only permute it cyclically, which corresponds to rotations by multiples of $\tfrac\pi3$.
On the other hand, the holonomy of the loop that surrounds $z_5$ is a rotation by $\tfrac\pi3$.
Consider a closed geodesic $\gamma_1$ minimizing the length among all not null-homotopic circles.
Let $\gamma_2$ be another closed geodesic that minimizes the length and is not homotopic to any power of $\gamma_1$.
Note that $\gamma_1$ and $\gamma_2$ intersect at a single point;
otherwise, one could shorten one of them keeping the defining property.
Note that $\gamma_i$ does not contain $z_5$.
In fact, no geodesic can pass thru any singular point with a total angle smaller than $2\cdot\pi$.
Assume that $\gamma_i$ passes thru $z_7$.
Then by $({*})$, one of the two angles cut by $\gamma_i$ at $z_7$ is $\pi$.
It follows that one can push $\gamma_i$ aside so that it does not longer pass thru $z_7$, but remains to be a closed geodesic with the same length.
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{33 mm}
\vskip0mm
\centering
\includegraphics{mppics/pic-810}
\end{wrapfigure}
Cut the torus along $\gamma_1$ and $\gamma_2$.
In the obtained quadrilateral, connect $z_5$ to $z_7$ by a minimizing geodesic and cut along it.
This way we obtain an annulus $\Omega$ with a flat metric.
Note that a neighborhood of the first boundary component is a parallelogram --- it has equal opposite sides and its angles add up to $2\cdot \pi$.
In particular, $\Omega$ admits an isometric immersion into the plane.
The second boundary component has to be mapped to a diangle with straight sides and angles $\tfrac\pi3$.
Such diangle does not exist in the plane --- a contradiction.
\qeds
The problem was originally discovered and solved by {\fontencoding{T1}\selectfont Stanislav Jendro\v{l}}
and Ernest Jucovi\v{c} \cite{jendrol-jucovich},
their proof is combinatorial.
The solution described above was given by Rostislav Matveyev \cite{matveyev}.
A complex-analytic proof was found by
Ivan Izmestiev,
Robert Kusner,
Günter Rote,
Boris Springborn,
and John Sullivan \cite{izmestiev-rote-springborn-kusner}.
\begin{wrapfigure}{r}{20 mm}
\vskip0mm
\centering
\includegraphics{mppics/pic-812}
\end{wrapfigure}
There are flat metrics on the torus with
only two singular points of total angles $\tfrac53\cdot\pi$ and $\tfrac73\cdot\pi$.
Such an example can be obtained by identifying the hexagon on the picture according to the arrows.
However, the holonomy group of the obtained torus is generated by the rotation by $\tfrac\pi6$.
In particular, the observation $({*})$ is essential in the proof.
The same argument shows that the
holonomy group of a flat torus with exactly two singular points of total angle $2\cdot(1\pm \tfrac1n)\cdot\pi$ has more than $n$ elements.
In the solution, we did the case $n=6$.
If one denotes by $v_m$ the number of vertices in a triangulation of the torus with $m$ incoming edges,
then by Euler's formula, we get
\[\sum_m(m-6)\cdot v_m=0.\leqno({*}{*})\]
Note that this equation says nothing about $v_6$.
It turns out that for almost any sequence $v_3,v_4,\dots$ satisfying $({*}{*})$ one can adjust $v_6$ so that it corresponds to a triangulation of the torus --- the sequence
\[0,0,1,v_6,1,0,0,\dots\]
discussed in the problem is the only exception. %???REF
The following problem is harder.
Recall that the curvature of a point $s$ in a polyhedral surface is defined as $2\cdot\pi-\theta$, where $\theta$ denotes the total angle around~$s$.
Note that all regular points in a polyhedral surface have zero curvature.
\begin{pr}
Let $\Sigma$ be a spherical polyhedral space homeomorphic to the 2-sphere
and $\omega_1,\dots,\omega_n$ be the curvatures of its singular points.
Set
\[\delta_i=\min\set{|\tfrac{\omega_i}2-2\cdot k\cdot\pi|}{k\in\ZZ}.\]
Show that there is a closed polygonal line in the unit sphere with sides
$\delta_1,\dots,\delta_n$.
\end{pr}
This problem was stated and solved by Gabriele Mondello and Dmitri Panov \cite{mondello-panov}.
The solution requires another holonomy group ---
it assigns an element of the double covering of $\SO(3)$ (which is $\SU(2)\z=\mathbb{S}^3$) to any loop in $\Sigma$ that avoids singularities.
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\parbf{No simple geodesics.}
The curvature of a vertex on the surface of a convex polyhedron
is defined as $2\cdot\pi-\theta$, where $\theta$ is the total angle around the vertex.
By the Gauss--Bonnet formula, a simple closed geodesic cuts the surface into two disks each with total curvature $2\cdot\pi$.
Therefore it is sufficient to construct a convex polyhedron with curvatures of the vertices $\omega_1,\dots,\omega_n$ such that
$2\cdot\pi$ cannot be obtained as a sum of some of the $\omega_i$.
An example of that type can be found among the tetrahedrons.
\qeds
The problem is due to Gregory Galperin \cite{galperin};
it was rediscovered by Dmitry Fuchs and Serge Tabachnikov \cite[see 20.8 in][]{fuchs-tabachnikov}.
The following problem is closely related.
\begin{pr}
Assume that the surface of convex polyhedron $P$ contains arbitrary long closed simple geodesics.
Show that $P$ is an \emph{isosceles tetrahedron};
that is, the opposite edges of the tetrahedron are equal.
\end{pr}
The latter statement was proved by Vladimir Protasov [see \ncite{protasov} and also \ncite{akopyan-petrunin}, \ncite{itoh-vilcu}].