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arxiv: math/0211268 · v2 · submitted 2002-11-18 · 🧮 math.CO · math.MG

Counting Lattice Triangulations

classification 🧮 math.CO math.MG
keywords triangulationslargenumberresultsallowapproachboundscomputation
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We discuss the problem to count, or, more modestly, to estimate the number f(m,n) of unimodular triangulations of the planar grid of size $m\times n$. Among other tools, we employ recursions that allow one to compute the (huge) number of triangulations for small m and rather large n by dynamic programming; we show that this computation can be done in polynomial time if m is fixed, and present computational results from our implementation of this approach. We also present new upper and lower bounds for large m and n, and we report about results obtained from a computer simulation of the random walk that is generated by flips.

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  1. Sampling Triangulations and Calabi-Yau Threefolds with Autoregressive GNNs

    hep-th 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    Introduces dualGNN, an autoregressive message-passing GNN using signed circuits to sample uniform fine regular triangulations of lattice polytopes, applied to Calabi-Yau threefolds at h^{1,1}=86 and 128.