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cover and hide with squares

I am studying two numbers, related to squares, that can characterize a polygon P: MinCoverNumber = the minimum number of axis-aligned squares required to exactly cover P (the covering squares may ...
Erel Segal-Halevi's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
547 views

Cover of a n-simplex with balls

Consider a n-simplex. For each edge (i,j), consider a n-ball, such that vertices i and j are antipodal on this ball. Is the simplex covered by the union of these balls? Thank you.
Max's user avatar
  • 195
5 votes
1 answer
247 views

Question on the exact largest minimum angle

Could anyone help find the EXACT largest minimum angle between any pair of lines among 5 lines passing through the origin in $\mathbb{R}^3$? Additionally, what is the exact largest minimum angle ...
Don's user avatar
  • 61
5 votes
2 answers
441 views

Touching-tetrahedra graphs

Have the graphs representable by touching tetrahedra been explored? Let $\cal T$ be a collection of tetrahedra in $\mathbb{R}^3$ with pairwise disjoint interiors. Define a graph $G_{\cal T}$ to have ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
430 views

Volume of a shape whose boundary consists of portions of spheres symmetrically placed about the origin in $d\gg 1$ dimensions

We are given a convex shape $S$ in the $d$-dimensional Euclidean space, whose boundary is formed by portions of $2d$ different spheres, one portion per sphere. The radius of each sphere is the same, $...
Penelope Benenati's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
246 views

Convex polyhedra with non-congruent faces

Question: Are there convex polyhedra wherein all faces are convex polygons with same area and perimeter and no two faces are mutually congruent? Remarks: If the answer to above is "no", then,...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
5 votes
2 answers
366 views

Infinitely long rods that touch one another

Background: The basic question as given in 'Research Problems in Discrete Geometry' By Moser, Brass and Pach (page 98) is: What is the max number of congruent infinite circular cylinders that can be ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
5 votes
2 answers
134 views

Is there a non-orthogonal linear deformation of a polytope that preserves edge-lengths and vertex-origin-distances?

Is there a polytope $P\subset\Bbb R^d$ (convex hull of finitely many points, not contained in a proper affine subspace), and a linear, but non-orthogonal transformation $T\in\mathrm{GL}(\Bbb R^d)\...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
5 votes
1 answer
177 views

Orientations of triples of points in the plane

Given a finite indexing-set $I$ and a collection $P = \{P_i: \ i \in I\}$ of points in the plane no three of which are collinear, let $I_{(3)}$ denote the set of ordered triples of distinct elements ...
James Propp's user avatar
  • 19.7k
5 votes
1 answer
307 views

Panning for gold nuggets: a type of isoperimetric problem

Let $C$ be a unit-radius circle in the plane. Suppose you have a total length $L$ of string available, and your task is to connect chords of $C$ using no more than $L$ of string to minimize the ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
406 views

Computational approach deciding whether a set of Wang Tile could tile the space up to some size

As an applied person, I'm facing one practical problem deciding whether a set of Wang tile could tile the plane periodically or aperiodically. Although both problems seem undecidable, but I'm on a ...
user40780's user avatar
  • 867
5 votes
2 answers
629 views

Approximate search space on a 5x5x5 cube with 3 different possible classes?

Hey all, I read the meta, and I realize this question might be pretty elementary for this site, but I'm having trouble computing this, and I know it won't take too much insight for someone to give me ...
prelic's user avatar
  • 153
5 votes
1 answer
190 views

Finding a superbase in a lattice of Voronoi first kind

An $n$-dimensional lattice in $\mathbb R^n$ is said to be of Voronoi’s first kind if it there exists $n+1$ vectors $b_1,\cdots b_{n+1}$ (called the superbase) such that $\{b_1,\ldots,b_n \}$ is a ...
user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
361 views

What is known about the duals of cyclic polytopes?

What is known about the duals of cyclic polytopes, in particular, their facets (or equivalently, the vertex-figures of cyclic polytopes)? In even dimensions, all facets of the dual are ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
5 votes
2 answers
267 views

A Voronoi Iteration Game

Let $P_i$ be a set of points in the plane and $P_{i+1}$ the corners of the Voronoi diagram of $P_i$. Start with some $P_1$ and iterate away. What happens? Can you choose a $P_1$ so the iteration goes ...
Hauke Reddmann's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
1k views

regular polyhedra (and polytopes) in hyperbolic geometry, and generalisations

While there exist regular tesselations of the hyperbolic plane with arbitrary regular polygons, there are no new regular polyhedra in hyperbolic (3D) space. This being quite trivial, it is probably ...
Feldmann Denis's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
532 views

Regular lattice polygons

Suppose I want to construct an $N$-gon in the plane whose vertices are integer lattice points, and which is close to a regular $N$-gon (which means, the ratio of longest to the shortest side is within ...
Igor Rivin's user avatar
  • 96.4k
5 votes
1 answer
397 views

How much of an aperiodic tiling is needed to force aperiodicity?

Consider an aperiodic tiling. By definition, there is a $C$ such that, for any box of side $C$, the part of the tiling contained in the box can be continued to the whole plane only in a non-periodic ...
H A Helfgott's user avatar
  • 20.2k
5 votes
1 answer
230 views

Which pyramids fill space?

Let us define a pyramid as a convex polyhedron with one quadrilateral face and four triangular faces. Question: How many pyramids (or families of pyramids) are known that can fill 3D space without ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
5 votes
1 answer
264 views

Is there a polytope with an essentially unique shape?

More percisely: Question: Is there a (convex) polytope that has a unique realization up to, say, projective transformations? I suppose I have to assume that it has more than $d+2$ vertices/facets if ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
5 votes
1 answer
114 views

Packing in uniform domains

Given $N$ points $X:=(x_i)_{i \in \{1,..,N\}}$, we now define a score function $S:X \rightarrow \mathbb{N}$ that is $S(X)= \sum_{i=1}^N S(x_i)$ where the score of $S(x_i)$ is $$S(x_i) = 2* \vert \{x_j;...
Sascha's user avatar
  • 536
5 votes
1 answer
156 views

On folding a polygonal sheet

Consider a polygonal sheet $P$ of area $A$ with $N$ vertices (it material is not stretchable or tearable). Let $n$ be a positive integer >=2. Question: Let $P$ lie on a flat plane. We need to fold ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
5 votes
1 answer
188 views

Transport tubes in a sphere

Let $S$ be a unit-radius sphere in $\mathbb{R}^3$. Q0. Where should one place $3$ disjoint lines intersecting $S$ to minimize the maximum distance between any two points in $S$, where distance is ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
378 views

Light inside a polyhedron

I have two questions the same as Mostafa's Question: Visibility of vertices in polyhedra Suppose $P$ is a closed polyhedron in space (i.e. a union of polygons which is homeomorphic to $S^2$) and $X$ ...
Morteza's user avatar
  • 628
5 votes
0 answers
177 views

Tiling with triangles of same circumradius and inradius

Consider a pair of positive real numbers $r$ and $R$ with $r<R/2$. Then we can form infinitely many triangles all with circumradius $R$ and inradius $r$. For any such pair, the resulting triangles ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
5 votes
0 answers
235 views

Arrangement of points, lines, and planes

Is it possible to construct a finite nontrivial arrangement of points, lines, and planes in 3-dimensional Euclidean space with the following properties? every line is incident with four points and ...
Daniel Sebald's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
190 views

The existence of $n$-sided cells in regular $m$-gons

For any integer $n >= 3$, does there exist a regular $m$-gon with all diagonals drawn containing a cell with $n$ sides? See A342222 and its cross-references. Regular polygon on the Wiki.   &...
Peter Luschny's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
93 views

Which polytopes can be deformed while keeping their edge-lengths?

Let $P\subset\Bbb R^d$ be a convex polytope (a convex hull of finitely many points). Lets call it flexible, if it can be continuously deformed while keeping its combinatorial type, and keeping its ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
5 votes
0 answers
313 views

Trade-off between covering number, ball radius and diameter of $d$-dimensional shapes

Given any $d$-dimensional shape $X$ in the Euclidean space, let $\ell(X)$ be the length of the longest line segment connecting two points of $X$. How can we prove the following statement? There exists ...
Penelope Benenati's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
199 views

Existence of a honeycomb composed by nearly-hyperspherical $d$-dimensional cells having the same shape and size

Let $\mathcal{H}$ the class of all honeycombs composed by $d$-dimensional cells $C$ having all the same shape and size in a $d$-dimensional space $\mathcal{S}$. Let $s(C)$ and $\ell(C)$ be ...
Penelope Benenati's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
139 views

On convex regions containing (and contained within) a given triangle

Given an arbitrary triangle T. How does one find the convex region C_M of largest area containing T such that T is also the largest area triangle that is contained within C_M? Guess: for any T, ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
5 votes
0 answers
508 views

Longest simple path through hypercube corners

This is a variation on a previously answered question, Longest path through hypercube corners. Here I am seeking the longest simple (non-self-intersecting) path through the unit hypercube's vertices, ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
135 views

What is the maximal convex hull in $\mathbb R^3$ of a tree with fixed total length?

Denote by $\mathcal T_n$ the set of all trees on $n$ nodes. For a tree $T\in\mathcal T_n$, we assign to each edge a non-negative length such that the sum of all lengths is 1. Denote by $v(T)$ the ...
Wolfgang's user avatar
  • 13.4k
5 votes
0 answers
311 views

Biggest (or large) rectangle in a polytope

I need an efficient method to construct a (hyper)rectangle inside a polytope with a lot of dimensions (say $100 < d < 1000$). Ideally I'd want the biggest possible rectangle, but as I don't ...
Elliot Gorokhovsky's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
214 views

Visibility in a prime orchard

This suggests a variant on Polya's orchard problem. That problem asks1 for which radius $\epsilon$ of trees at each lattice point within a distance $R$ of the origin block all lines of sight to the ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
1k views

N-balls covering n-balls

This question is a follow-on question from: Covering a unit ball with balls half the radius The questions are these: Given an arbitrary dimension d, and a unit n-ball in d-dimensional Euclidean ...
Rob Bird's user avatar
  • 151
4 votes
4 answers
536 views

Vertex-transitive polytopes in any dimension with any number of vertices?

Given positive integers $d$ and $v$ with $v \geq d+1$, does there always exist a (convex) vertex-transitive $d$-polytope with $v$ vertices? It seems that the answer should be "obviously" true, but I ...
Donald's user avatar
  • 51
4 votes
2 answers
567 views

Realization spaces for regular convex polytopes

Q1. Are there convex polytopes combinatorially equivalent to each of the regular polytopes that are realized with integer vertex coordinates?         &...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
438 views

Perfect squaring of rectangles

A perfect squaring of a rectangle may be defined as a partition of the rectangle into finitely many squares all of which are mutually non-congruent. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squaring_the_square ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
4 votes
3 answers
347 views

Minimal data required to determine a convex polytope

Let $P\subset \Bbb R^d$ be a convex polytope. Suppose that I know its combinatorial type (aka. the face-lattice), the length $\ell_i$ of each edge, and the distance $r_i$ of each vertex from the ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
4 votes
2 answers
88 views

From a point and continuing reflection in $2n+1$ points then midpoint of the end point and the first point is fixed

Given $2n+1$ fixed points: $A_1, A_2,....,A_{2n+1}$ and point $P$. Let $B_1$ is the reflection of $P$ in $A_1$, $B_2$ is the reflection of $B_1$ in $A_2$,...., $B_{2n+1}$ is the reflection of $B_{2n}$ ...
Đào Thanh Oai's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
271 views

Centralizing four red vectors in six green sectors

Four red vectors are given, one per quadrant, $[0,90^\circ)$, $[90^\circ,180^\circ)$, etc. A rigid star of six green vectors separated by $60^\circ$ can be positioned at $(\theta, \theta+60^\circ, \...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
312 views

Which convex pentagon gives least packing density?

Among all convex pentagons, does the regular pentagon give least packing density? Further question: For each $n > 6$, is the regular $n$-gon the minimum of packing density? An analogous question ...
Nandakumar R's user avatar
  • 5,979
4 votes
1 answer
263 views

Knotted TSP tours in 3D?

In the plane, the Euclidean TSP tour never crosses itself—it is always a simple polygon. I am wondering if there is a similar constraint for the Euclidean TSP tour of points in $\mathbb{R}^3$. ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
298 views

Does Kalai's $3^d$ conjecture hold for simplicial spheres?

Kalai's $3^d$ conjecture asserts that every centrally symmetric $d$-polytope has at least $3^d$ non-empty faces. This is open in general, but has been proven for simplicial polytopes. Question: Does ...
M. Winter's user avatar
  • 13.6k
4 votes
1 answer
159 views

Best polygonal approximation to a polynomial $\pm$ c

Let a planar region $R$ be defined by the vertical range bounded by a polynomial $f(x) \pm c$ with $c>0$ a constant, and with $x$ varying between the smallest and largest roots of $f(x)$. For ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
1k views

Algorithm for the shortest path through all the points of a 2D cloud

I have an array of points with their coordinates X and Y. Each point represents a bus stop. I need to sort the points in a sequence by giving them sequence numbers, so that the path from the first to ...
Julien's user avatar
  • 61
4 votes
2 answers
1k views

Sphere - Symmetry and Triangulation [closed]

The sphere is symmetric with respect to any rotation. However, it loses this property as soon as it is triangulated. Are there sequences of triangulations that possess particular large symmetry groups ...
warsaga's user avatar
  • 1,256
4 votes
1 answer
367 views

convex polyhedron in the unit cube

Let $P$ be a given finite set of points within the $n$-dimensional unit cube. A finite set $Q$ of points within the $n$-dimensional unit cube covers $P$ if $\operatorname{conv}(Q) \supseteq P$ where $\...
Stefan Kiefer's user avatar

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