Consider a two-dimensional sphere with a Riemannian metric of total area $4\pi$. Does there exist a subset whose area equals $2\pi$ and whose boundary has length no greater than $2\pi$?
(To avoid technicalities, let's require that the boundary is a 1-dimensional smooth submanifold.)
If that fails, does there exists a set, say, with area between $\pi$ and $2\pi$ and length of the boundary no greater than that of the spherical cap of the same area? Or at least no greater than $2\pi$?
More generally, I am interested in any results saying that the isoperimetric profile of the round metric on the sphere is maximal in some sense (among all Riemannian metrics of the same area).
Notes.
The answer is affirmative for central symmetric metrics (i.e. if the metric admits an $\mathbb{RP}^2$ quotient). This follows from Pu's isosystolic inequality: in $\mathbb{RP}^2$ with a metric of area $2\pi$ there exists a non-contractible loop of length at most $\pi$. The lift to the sphere is a loop of length at most $2\pi$ dividing the area in two equal parts.
One should not require that the set is bounded by a single loop. A counter-example is the surface of a small neighborhood of a tripod (formed by three long segments starting from one point) in $\mathbb R^3$. Here one can divide the area in half by two short loops, but one loop would be long. (However one can cut off 1/3 of the area by one short loop.)
In $S^3$ the similar assertion is false, moreover the minimal area of the boundary of a half-volume set can be arbitrary large.