In
real affine space, the complement is disconnected: it is made up of separate pieces called
cells or
regions or
chambers, each of which is either a bounded region that is a
convex polytope, or an unbounded region that is a convex
polyhedral region which goes off to infinity. Each flat of
A is also divided into pieces by the hyperplanes that do not contain the flat; these pieces are called the
faces of
A. The regions are faces because the whole space is a flat. The faces of codimension 1 may be called the
facets of
A. The
face semilattice of an arrangement is the set of all faces, ordered by
inclusion. Adding an extra top element to the face semilattice gives the
face lattice. In two dimensions (i.e., in the real affine
plane) each region is a convex
polygon (if it is bounded) or a convex polygonal region which goes off to infinity. • As an example, if the arrangement consists of three parallel lines, the intersection semilattice consists of the plane and the three lines, but not the empty set. There are four regions, none of them bounded. • If we add a line crossing the three parallels, then the intersection semilattice consists of the plane, the four lines, and the three points of intersection. There are eight regions, still none of them bounded. • If we add one more line, parallel to the last, then there are 12 regions, of which two are bounded
parallelograms. Typical problems about an arrangement in
n-dimensional real space are to say how many regions there are, or how many faces of dimension 4, or how many bounded regions. These questions can be answered just from the intersection semilattice. For instance, two basic theorems, from Zaslavsky (1975), are that the number of regions of an affine arrangement equals (−1)''n'
p'A
(−1) and the number of bounded regions equals (−1)n
pA
(1). Similarly, the number of k
-dimensional faces or bounded faces can be read off as the coefficient of x''
n−
k in (−1)
n w
A (−
x, −1) or (−1)''n'
w'A
(−x'', 1). designed a fast algorithm to determine the face of an arrangement of hyperplanes containing an input point. Another question about an arrangement in real space is to decide how many regions are
simplices (the
n-dimensional generalization of
triangles and
tetrahedra). This cannot be answered based solely on the intersection semilattice. The
McMullen problem asks for the smallest arrangement of a given dimension in
general position in
real projective space for which there does not exist a cell touched by all hyperplanes. A real linear arrangement has, besides its face semilattice, a
poset of regions, a different one for each region. This poset is formed by choosing an arbitrary base region,
B0, and associating with each region
R the set
S(
R) consisting of the hyperplanes that separate
R from
B. The regions are partially ordered so that
R1 ≥
R2 if
S(
R1,
R) contains
S(
R2,
R). In the special case when the hyperplanes arise from a
root system, the resulting poset is the corresponding
Weyl group with the weak order. In general, the poset of regions is
ranked by the number of separating hyperplanes and its
Möbius function has been computed . Vadim Schechtman and
Alexander Varchenko introduced a matrix indexed by the regions. The matrix element for the region R_i and R_j is given by the product of indeterminate variables a_H for every hyperplane H that separates these two regions. If these variables are specialized to be all value q, then this is called the q-matrix (over the Euclidean domain \mathbb{Q}[q]) for the arrangement and much information is contained in its
Smith normal form. ==Complex arrangements==