on a
CIE 1931 xy
chromaticity diagram defines the space's
gamut of possible colors Convex hulls have wide applications in many fields. Within mathematics, convex hulls are used to study
polynomials, matrix
eigenvalues, and
unitary elements, and several theorems in
discrete geometry involve convex hulls. They are used in
robust statistics as the outermost contour of
Tukey depth, are part of the
bagplot visualization of two-dimensional data, and define risk sets of
randomized decision rules. Convex hulls of
indicator vectors of solutions to combinatorial problems are central to
combinatorial optimization and
polyhedral combinatorics. In economics, convex hulls can be used to apply methods of
convexity in economics to non-convex markets. In geometric modeling, the convex hull property
Bézier curves helps find their crossings, and convex hulls are part of the measurement of boat hulls. And in the study of animal behavior, convex hulls are used in a standard definition of the
home range.
Mathematics Newton polygons of univariate
polynomials and
Newton polytopes of multivariate polynomials are convex hulls of points derived from the exponents of the terms in the polynomial, and can be used to analyze the
asymptotic behavior of the polynomial and the valuations of its roots. Convex hulls and polynomials also come together in the
Gauss–Lucas theorem, according to which the
roots of the derivative of a polynomial all lie within the convex hull of the roots of the polynomial. In
spectral analysis, the
numerical range of a
normal matrix is the convex hull of its
eigenvalues. The
Russo–Dye theorem describes the convex hulls of
unitary elements in a
C*-algebra. In
discrete geometry, both
Radon's theorem and
Tverberg's theorem concern the existence of partitions of point sets into subsets with intersecting convex hulls. The definitions of a convex set as containing line segments between its points, and of a convex hull as the intersection of all convex supersets, apply to
hyperbolic spaces as well as to Euclidean spaces. However, in hyperbolic space, it is also possible to consider the convex hulls of sets of
ideal points, points that do not belong to the hyperbolic space itself but lie on the boundary of a model of that space. The boundaries of convex hulls of ideal points of three-dimensional hyperbolic space are analogous to
ruled surfaces in Euclidean space, and their metric properties play an important role in the
geometrization conjecture in
low-dimensional topology. Hyperbolic convex hulls have also been used as part of the calculation of
canonical triangulations of
hyperbolic manifolds, and applied to determine the equivalence of
knots. See also the section on
Brownian motion for the application of convex hulls to this subject, and the section on
space curves for their application to the theory of
developable surfaces.
Statistics . The outer shaded region is the convex hull, and the inner shaded region is the 50% Tukey depth contour. In
robust statistics, the convex hull provides one of the key components of a
bagplot, a method for visualizing the spread of two-dimensional sample points. The contours of
Tukey depth form a nested family of convex sets, with the convex hull outermost, and the bagplot also displays another polygon from this nested family, the contour of 50% depth. In statistical
decision theory, the risk set of a
randomized decision rule is the convex hull of the risk points of its underlying deterministic decision rules.
Combinatorial optimization In
combinatorial optimization and
polyhedral combinatorics, central objects of study are the convex hulls of
indicator vectors of solutions to a combinatorial problem. If the facets of these polytopes can be found, describing the polytopes as intersections of halfspaces, then algorithms based on
linear programming can be used to find optimal solutions. In
multi-objective optimization, a different type of convex hull is also used, the convex hull of the weight vectors of solutions. One can maximize any
quasiconvex combination of weights by finding and checking each convex hull vertex, often more efficiently than checking all possible solutions.
Economics In the
Arrow–Debreu model of
general economic equilibrium, agents are assumed to have convex
budget sets and
convex preferences. These assumptions of
convexity in economics can be used to prove the existence of an equilibrium. When actual economic data is
non-convex, it can be made convex by taking convex hulls. The
Shapley–Folkman theorem can be used to show that, for large markets, this approximation is accurate, and leads to a "quasi-equilibrium" for the original non-convex market.
Geometric modeling In
geometric modeling, one of the key properties of a
Bézier curve is that it lies within the convex hull of its control points. This so-called "convex hull property" can be used, for instance, in quickly detecting intersections of these curves. In the geometry of boat and ship design,
chain girth is a measurement of the size of a sailing vessel, defined using the convex hull of a cross-section of the
hull of the vessel. It differs from the
skin girth, the perimeter of the cross-section itself, except for boats and ships that have a convex hull.
Ethology The convex hull is commonly known as the minimum convex polygon in
ethology, the study of animal behavior, where it is a classic, though perhaps simplistic, approach in estimating an animal's
home range based on points where the animal has been observed.
Outliers can make the minimum convex polygon excessively large, which has motivated relaxed approaches that contain only a subset of the observations, for instance by choosing one of the convex layers that is close to a target percentage of the samples, or in the
local convex hull method by combining convex hulls of
neighborhoods of points.
Quantum physics In
quantum physics, the
state space of any quantum system — the set of all ways the system can be prepared — is a convex hull whose extreme points are
positive-semidefinite operators known as pure states and whose interior points are called mixed states. The
Schrödinger–HJW theorem proves that any mixed state can in fact be written as a convex combination of pure states in multiple ways.
Thermodynamics –
carbon compounds. Mg2C3 is expected to be unstable as it lies above the lower hull. A convex hull in
thermodynamics was identified by
Josiah Willard Gibbs (1873), although the paper was published before the convex hull was so named. In a set of energies of several
stoichiometries of a material, only those measurements on the lower convex hull will be stable. When removing a point from the hull and then calculating its distance to the hull, its distance to the new hull represents the degree of stability of the phase. ==History==