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Tom Copeland
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Equilibrium configurations of ions on n-Dim balls.

Given an n-dimensional electrically neutral, solid metal ball (a point for n=0; a rod, n=1; a disc, n=2; a solid ball, n=3; ...), place N=(n+1)! identical ions on the ball. As one of my favorite physics professors used to say, forget the mathematics, intuitively I expect the ions to equilibrate to the vertices of an n-D permutohedron inscribed in the n-ball (e.g., a hexagon inscribed in the circumference of a disc with 6 ions and a truncated octahedron for n=3 ). Similarly with N= [2(n+1)]! /[(n+1)! (n+2)!] (the Catalan numbers), I expect to see an associahedron (a Stasheff polytope, e.g., a pentagon for the disc with 5 ions).

Is my intuition correct? Has anyone seen this worked out mathematically, as an extremum problem? An electrostatics simulation for n=3 would be interesting also. (See OEIS A019538 for refined f-vectors of permutohedra / permutahedra and A133437 for associahedra.)

Tom Copeland
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