Recent Comments
Matthew D Cory on November’s Lectures, 202… jamesmessig on November’s Lectures, 202… Gil Kalai on Quantum Computers: A Brief Ass… Quantum Computers: A… on November’s Lectures, 202… Matthew D Cory on November’s Lectures, 202… jamesmessig on November’s Lectures, 202… Matthew D Cory on November’s Lectures, 202… Gil Kalai on November’s Lectures, 202… jamesmessig on November’s Lectures, 202… Gil Kalai on November’s Lectures, 202… Matthew D Cory on November’s Lectures, 202… Matthew D Cory on November’s Lectures, 202… -
Recent Posts
- Combinatorial Morning in Tel Aviv, Sunday 28/12/2025
- November’s Lectures, 2025
- Ten Recent Questions for ChatGPT
- A Visit to the Israeli Quantum Computing Center (IQCC)
- Computational Complexity and Explanations in Physics
- Kazhdan Seminar fall 2025 – Starting Today Oct. 19, 2026.
- Explicit Lossless Vertex Expanders!
- Dror Bar-Natan and Roland Van der Veen – A Fast, Strong, and Fun knot invariant!
- Polynomial Bounds for Chowla’s Cosine Problem
Top Posts & Pages
- Elchanan Mossel's Amazing Dice Paradox (your answers to TYI 30)
- Combinatorial Morning in Tel Aviv, Sunday 28/12/2025
- TYI 30: Expected number of Dice throws
- Hong Wang and Joshua Zahl's Solution for the Kakeya Problem in Three Dimensions - Reflections and Links
- What is the maximum number of Tverberg's partitions?
- ChatGPT Meets Elchanan Mossel's Dice Problem
- Navier-Stokes Fluid Computers
- Seven Problems Around Tverberg's Theorem
- Touching Simplices and Polytopes: Perles' argument
RSS
Monthly Archives: August 2008
A Diameter Problem (2)
2. The connection with Hirsch’s Conjecture The Hirsch Conjecture asserts that the diameter of the graph G(P) of a d-polytope P with n facets is at most n-d. Not even a polynomial upper bound for the diameter in terms of d and … Continue reading
Posted in Combinatorics, Convex polytopes, Open problems
5 Comments
Two Very Early Problems, a Simple Solution, and a New Problem
As an undergraduate student whenever I studied some subject I tried to come up with problems. Many of these problems were artificial or silly and, of course, I forgot most of them. But a few still make sense. Here are … Continue reading
Posted in Open problems
10 Comments
Surprising Math
1. A pleasant surprise When I worked on the diameter problem for d-polytopes with n facets. I was aiming to prove an upper bound of the form but my proof only gave It was a pleasant surprise to note that . 2. … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
4 Comments
Plans and Updates
Jerusalem and Budapest Monday, last week was the last day of lectures for the spring term here at the Hebrew U. One outcome of the long professors’ strike was a very fruitful year for research seminars. We ran them during … Continue reading
More Art: Tami’s Autoportrait
And in my office, there is a beautiful autoportrait by my sister Tamar Kalai. (Click for a deatiled picture.)
Our Department’s Quilt
Academic administation is a topic of great interest that desrves a special post. The highest post I served was as the department chair, and one thing I did was to acquire for the department a quilt by the artist Anna Maria … Continue reading