A user's guide to the topological Tverberg conjecture (1605.05141v5)
Abstract: The topological Tverberg conjecture was considered a central unsolved problem of topological combinatorics. The conjecture asserts that for any integers $r,d>1$ and any continuous map $f:\Delta\to\mathbb Rd$ of the $(d+1)(r-1)$-dimensional simplex there are pairwise disjoint faces $\sigma_1,\ldots,\sigma_r\subset\Delta$ such that $f(\sigma_1)\cap \ldots \cap f(\sigma_r)\ne\emptyset$. The conjecture was proved for a prime power $r$. Recently counterexamples for other $r$ were found. Analogously, the $r$-fold van Kampen-Flores conjecture holds for a prime power $r$ but does not hold for other $r$. The arguments form a beautiful and fruitful interplay between combinatorics, algebra and topology. We present a simplified exposition accessible to non-specialists in the area. We also mention some recent developments and open problems.