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arxiv: 1612.00617 · v2 · pith:4YNJDRNSnew · submitted 2016-12-02 · 🧮 math.NA · cs.NA· math.CO

Irregularities of distributions and extremal sets in combinatorial complexity theory

classification 🧮 math.NA cs.NAmath.CO
keywords mustpointstar-discrepancytheorycombinatorialleastnecessarilypoints
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In 2004 the second author of the present paper proved that a point set in $[0,1]^d$ which has star-discrepancy at most $\varepsilon$ must necessarily consist of at least $c_{abs} d \varepsilon^{-1}$ points. Equivalently, every set of $n$ points in $[0,1]^d$ must have star-discrepancy at least $c_{abs} d n^{-1}$. The original proof of this result uses methods from Vapnik--Chervonenkis theory and from metric entropy theory. In the present paper we give an elementary combinatorial proof for the same result, which is based on identifying a sub-box of $[0,1]^d$ which has approximately $d$ elements of the point set on its boundary. Furthermore, we show that a point set for which no such box exists is rather irregular, and must necessarily have a large star-discrepancy.

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