Combinatorics and Discrete Geometry

Combinatorics is the study of finite structures, many of which arise in other branches of mathematics or from problems arising in science or engineering. The study of combinatorics involves general questions of enumeration and structure, matroid theory and aspects of graph theory, partially ordered sets, set partitions and permutations and combinatorial structures such as finite geometries and designs. Techniques tend to be algebraic and topological, involving methods from commutative ring theory, algebraic topology, representation theory and Hopf algebras.

Discrete geometry is concerned with properties of finitely generated geometric objects such as polytopes and polyhedra, triangulations and polyhedral complexes, configurations of lines and, more generally, hyperplanes in Euclidean and other spaces, the theory of rigid and flexible frameworks, tilings and packings. Many problems in discrete geometry arise from questions in computational geometry related to algorithms for analyzing discrete geometric structures.

Faculty Members

Marcelo AguiarAlgebra, combinatorics, category theory
Robert ConnellyDiscrete geometry, computational geometry and the rigidity of discrete structures
Tara HolmSymplectic geometry
Jon KleinbergNetworks and information
Robert KleinbergAlgorithms and theoretical computer science
Allen KnutsonAlgebraic geometry and algebraic combinatorics
Lionel LevineProbability and combinatorics
Karola MeszarosAlgebraic and geometric combinatorics
Edward SwartzCombinatorics, topology, geometry, and commutative algebra
Éva TardosAlgorithm design and algorithmic game theory

Emeritus and Other Faculty

Louis BilleraGeometric and algebraic combinatorics
Shiliang GaoAlgebraic combinatorics
Marie MacDonaldNumber Theory, commutative algebra, combinatorial geometry, university mathematics education

Activities and Resources:

Historically, there have been connections between combinatorics, in particular enumeration theory, and questions in probability. In recent decades, there have been close connections between certain areas of combinatorics and questions arising in theoretical computer science and discrete optimization. Even more recently, there have arisen links to biology, in particular, the study of phylogenetics.

The group at Cornell is particularly interested in algebraic and topological combinatorics, questions of enumeration in polytopes and, more generally, matroids, combinatorial Hopf algebras and rigidity in discrete geometric structures.

Related people

All research areas

Accelerator Physics    Aesthetics & Media Studies    Algebra    Analysis    Analytical    Applied Mathematics    Astrophysics, General Relativity and Cosmology    Atmospheric Spectral Signatures    Bangla    Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Science    Bioinorganic    Biological Physics    Biology Education Research    Bioorganic    Biophysical    Black Holes and Neutron Stars    Burmese    Chemical Biology    Chinese (Mandarin)    Cognition    Combinatorics and Discrete Geometry    Community and Urban Sociology    Community Ecology and Population Biology    Comparative and World Literature    Comparative Media Studies    Computational Social Science    Cosmology and the Distant Universe    Critical Studies of Race, Gender & Sexuality    Critical Studies of Race, Gender, and Sexuality    Critical Theory    Culture    Development    Disks and Jets    Early Modern Studies    Economy and Society    Engaging With Life on Earth    Evolutionary Patterns and Processes    Experimental Condensed Matter Physics    Experimental Elementary Particle Physics    Extreme Physics and Astrophysics of Compact Objects    Galaxies Across the Universe    Gender    Geometry    Habitable Environments    Hindi-Urdu    Indonesian    Inequality and Social Stratification    Inorganic    Intimate Organismal Interactions and Chemical Ecology    Japanese   
Top