Many of the important properties of an integral polytope, including its
volume and number of vertices, is encoded by its
Ehrhart polynomial. Integral polytopes are prominently featured in the theory of
toric varieties, where they correspond to polarized projective toric varieties. For instance, the toric variety corresponding to a
simplex is a
projective space. The toric variety corresponding to a
unit cube is the
Segre embedding of the n -fold product of the projective line. In
algebraic geometry, an important instance of lattice polytopes called the
Newton polytopes are the convex hulls of vectors representing the exponents of each variable in the terms of a
polynomial. For example, the polynomial xy+2x^2+y^5+4 has four terms, xy with exponent vector (1,1), 2x^2 with exponent vector (2,0), y^5 with exponent vector (0,5), and 4 with exponent vector (0,0). Its Newton polytope is the convex hull of the four points (1,1), (2,0), (0,5), and (0,0). This hull is an integral triangle with the point (1,1) interior to the triangle and the other three points as its vertices. ==See also==