Observations: any thin isosceles triangle has exactly 1 partition into 2 congruent pieces - only 1 line, bisector of its apex, does it.
By attaching a right triangle with base 1 and altitude 2 to an isosceles triangle of base 2 and altitude 2 as below,
we can form a quadrilateral that can be cut into 3 convex congruent pieces as shown. The quad seems to have no other set of such cutting segments that is either disjoint totally to this set of cut segments or has a partial intersection with that set.
- For which values of n, the number of pieces, greater than 2, can one form convex polygonal regions which can be cut into n convex and mutually congruent pieces by exactly one set of cut lines? There should be no other set of cut lines that is disjoint to or has even a partial intersection with the one set.