scholarly journals Dihedral F-Tilings of the Sphere by Equilateral and Scalene Triangles - II

10.37236/815 ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. d'Azevedo Breda ◽  
Patrícia S. Ribeiro ◽  
Altino F. Santos

The study of dihedral f-tilings of the Euclidean sphere $S^2$ by triangles and $r$-sided regular polygons was initiated in 2004 where the case $r=4$ was considered [5]. In a subsequent paper [1], the study of all spherical f-tilings by triangles and $r$-sided regular polygons, for any $r\ge 5$, was described. Later on, in [3], the classification of all f-tilings of $S^2$ whose prototiles are an equilateral triangle and an isosceles triangle is obtained. The algebraic and combinatorial description of spherical f-tilings by equilateral triangles and scalene triangles of angles $\beta$, $\gamma$ and $\delta$ $(\beta>\gamma>\delta)$ whose edge adjacency is performed by the side opposite to $\beta$ was done in [4]. In this paper we extend these results considering the edge adjacency performed by the side opposite to $\delta$.

10.37236/746 ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Catarina P. Avelino ◽  
Altino F. Santos

The study of dihedral f-tilings of the sphere $S^2$ by spherical triangles and equiangular spherical quadrangles (which includes the case of 4-sided regular polygons) was presented by Breda and Santos [Beiträge zur Algebra und Geometrie, 45 (2004), 447–461]. Also, in a subsequent paper, the study of dihedral f-tilings of $S^2$ whose prototiles are an equilateral triangle (a 3-sided regular polygon) and an isosceles triangle was described (we believe that the analysis considering scalene triangles as the prototiles will lead to a wide family of f-tilings). In this paper we extend these results, presenting the study of dihedral f-tilings by spherical triangles and $r$-sided regular polygons, for any $r \ge 5$. The combinatorial structure, including the symmetry group of each tiling, is given.


10.37236/1223 ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. L. Graham ◽  
B. D. Lubachevsky

Previously published packings of equal disks in an equilateral triangle have dealt with up to 21 disks. We use a new discrete-event simulation algorithm to produce packings for up to 34 disks. For each $n$ in the range $22 \le n \le 34$ we present what we believe to be the densest possible packing of $n$ equal disks in an equilateral triangle. For these $n$ we also list the second, often the third and sometimes the fourth best packings among those that we found. In each case, the structure of the packing implies that the minimum distance $d(n)$ between disk centers is the root of polynomial $P_n$ with integer coefficients. In most cases we do not explicitly compute $P_n$ but in all cases we do compute and report $d(n)$ to 15 significant decimal digits. Disk packings in equilateral triangles differ from those in squares or circles in that for triangles there are an infinite number of values of $n$ for which the exact value of $d(n)$ is known, namely, when $n$ is of the form $\Delta (k) := \frac{k(k+1)}{2}$. It has also been conjectured that $d(n-1) = d(n)$ in this case. Based on our computations, we present conjectured optimal packings for seven other infinite classes of $n$, namely \begin{align*} n & = & \Delta (2k) +1, \Delta (2k+1) +1, \Delta (k+2) -2 , \Delta (2k+3) -3, \\ && \Delta (3k+1)+2 , 4 \Delta (k), \text{ and } 2 \Delta (k+1) + 2 \Delta (k) -1 . \end{align*} We also report the best packings we found for other values of $n$ in these forms which are larger than 34, namely, $n=37$, 40, 42, 43, 46, 49, 56, 57, 60, 63, 67, 71, 79, 84, 92, 93, 106, 112, 121, and 254, and also for $n=58$, 95, 108, 175, 255, 256, 258, and 260. We say that an infinite class of packings of $n$ disks, $n=n(1), n(2),...n(k),...$, is tight , if [$1/d(n(k)+1) - 1/d(n(k))$] is bounded away from zero as $k$ goes to infinity. We conjecture that some of our infinite classes are tight, others are not tight, and that there are infinitely many tight classes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 173-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
BENJAMIN HINKLE

A unimodal map $f:[0,1] \to [0,1]$ is renormalizable if there is a sub-interval $I \subset [0,1]$ and an $n > 1$ such that $f^n|_I$ is unimodal. The renormalization of $f$ is $f^n|_I$ rescaled to the unit interval.We extend the well-known classification of limits of renormalization of unimodal maps with bounded combinatorics to a classification of the limits of renormalization of unimodal maps with essentially bounded combinatorics. Together with results of Lyubich on the limits of renormalization with essentially unbounded combinatorics, this completes the combinatorial description of limits of renormalization. The techniques are based on the towers of McMullen and on the local analysis around perturbed parabolic points. We define a parabolic tower to be a sequence of unimodal maps related by renormalization or parabolic renormalization. We state and prove the combinatorial rigidity of bi-infinite parabolic towers with complex bounds and essentially bounded combinatorics, which implies the main theorem.As an example we construct a natural unbounded analogue of the period-doubling fixed point of renormalization, called the essentially period-tripling fixed point.


2015 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Janusz Januszewski

AbstractEvery collection of n (arbitrary-oriented) unit squares can be packed translatively into any equilateral triangle of side length 2:3755· √n.


2004 ◽  
Vol 88 (512) ◽  
pp. 226-229
Author(s):  
H. Martyn Cundy

The other day I received a long tube from a Canadian stranger containing a large poster featuring over a hundred polyhedra, including ‘all 92 Johnson polyhedra’. This term, though probably unfamiliar this side of the pond, was not completely unknown to me; it means convex polyhedra, excluding the regular and Archimedean ones, all of whose faces are regular polygons. Of course, as usual, we have to exclude those naughty polyhedra whose faces go around in pairs collecting squares (prisms) or equilateral triangles (antiprisms) and don’t know when to stop. The word convex is vital, otherwise there would be another infinite set. A lot of them are rather trivial, like sticking pyramids on the faces of a dodecahedron, but they include the deltahedra and many other interesting members. But they have at least one imitator who didn't quite make the grade. Trying to discover why, and how to coach him so that he would, I found that my spherical trigonometry was getting rather rusty so I set out to make one and see what was happening. I thought perhaps other readers would like to share this piece of antiresearch.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Anand K. Tiwari ◽  
Amit Tripathi ◽  
Yogendra Singh ◽  
Punam Gupta

A tiling of the Euclidean plane, by regular polygons, is called 2-uniform tiling if it has two orbits of vertices under the action of its symmetry group. There are 20 distinct 2-uniform tilings of the plane. Plane being the universal cover of torus and Klein bottle, it is natural to ask about the exploration of maps on these two surfaces corresponding to the 2-uniform tilings. We call such maps as doubly semiequivelar maps. In the present study, we compute and classify (up to isomorphism) doubly semiequivelar maps on torus and Klein bottle. This classification of semiequivelar maps is useful in classifying a category of symmetrical maps which have two orbits of vertices, named as 2-uniform maps.


10.37236/1771 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vania Mascioni

In the context of finite metric spaces with integer distances, we investigate the new Ramsey-type question of how many points can a space contain and yet be free of equilateral triangles. In particular, for finite metric spaces with distances in the set $\{1,\ldots,n\}$, the number $D_n$ is defined as the least number of points the space must contain in order to be sure that there will be an equilateral triangle in it. Several issues related to these numbers are studied, mostly focusing on low values of $n$. Apart from the trivial $D_1=3$, $D_2=6$, we prove that $D_3=12$, $D_4=33$ and $81\leq D_5 \leq 95$.


10.37236/4972 ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernardo M. Ábrego ◽  
Silvia Fernández-Merchant ◽  
Daniel J. Katz ◽  
Levon Kolesnikov

New bounds on the number of similar or directly similar copies of a pattern within a finite subset of the line or the plane are proved. The number of equilateral triangles whose vertices all lie within an $n$-point subset of the plane is shown to be no more than $\lfloor{(4 n-1)(n-1)/18}\rfloor$. The number of $k$-term arithmetic progressions that lie within an $n$-point subset of the line is shown to be at most $(n-r)(n+r-k+1)/(2 k-2)$, where $r$ is the remainder when $n$ is divided by $k-1$. This upper bound is achieved when the $n$ points themselves form an arithmetic progression, but for some values of $k$ and $n$, it can also be achieved for other configurations of the $n$ points, and a full classification of such optimal configurations is given. These results are achieved using a new general method based on ordering relations.


2003 ◽  
Vol 87 (508) ◽  
pp. 42-50
Author(s):  
Zvonko Čerin

In this paper we shall consider two situations in triangle geometry when equilateral triangles appear and then show that they are closely related.In the first (known as the Napoleon theorem) equilateral triangles BCAT, CABT, and ABCT, are built on the sides of an arbitrary triangle ABC and their centroids are (almost always) vertices of an equilateral triangle ANBNCN (known as a Napoleon triangle of ABC; see Figure 1).


1983 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. J. R. Mitchell

We state and prove a theorem which characterizes piecewise linear homology manifolds of sufficiently large dimension among locally compact finite-dimensional absolute neighbourhood retracts (ANRs). The proof is inspired by Cannon's observation (3) that a piecewise linear homology manifold is a topological manifold away from a locally finite set, and uses Galewski and Stern's work on simplicial triangulations of topological manifolds, the Edwards–Cannon–Quinn characterization of topological manifolds and Siebenmann's work on ends (3, 6, 4, 13, 14, 15, 16). All these tools have suitable relative versions and so the theorem can be extended to the bounded case. However, the most satisfactory extension requires a classification of triangulations of homology manifolds up to concordance. This will be given in a subsequent paper and the bounded case will be postponed to that paper.


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