Misplaced Pages

Disk covering problem

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The disk covering problem asks for the smallest real number r ( n ) {\displaystyle r(n)} such that n {\displaystyle n} disks of radius r ( n ) {\displaystyle r(n)} can be arranged in such a way as to cover the unit disk. Dually, for a given radius ε, one wishes to find the smallest integer n such that n disks of radius ε can cover the unit disk.

The best solutions known to date are as follows.

n r(n) Symmetry
1 1 All
2 1 All (2 stacked disks)
3 3 / 2 {\displaystyle {\sqrt {3}}/2} = 0.866025... 120°, 3 reflections
4 2 / 2 {\displaystyle {\sqrt {2}}/2} = 0.707107... 90°, 4 reflections
5 0.609382... OEISA133077 1 reflection
6 0.555905... OEISA299695 1 reflection
7 1 / 2 {\displaystyle 1/2} = 0.5 60°, 6 reflections
8 0.445041... ~51.4°, 7 reflections
9 0.414213... 45°, 8 reflections
10 0.394930... 36°, 9 reflections
11 0.380083... 1 reflection
12 0.361141... 120°, 3 reflections

Method

The following picture shows an example of a dashed disk of radius 1 covered by six solid-line disks of radius ~0.6. One of the covering disks is placed central and the remaining five in a symmetrical way around it.

While this is not the best layout for r(6), similar arrangements of six, seven, eight, and nine disks around a central disk all having same radius result in the best layout strategies for r(7), r(8), r(9), and r(10), respectively. The corresponding angles θ are written in the "Symmetry" column in the above table.

References

  1. Kershner, Richard (1939), "The number of circles covering a set", American Journal of Mathematics, 61 (3): 665–671, doi:10.2307/2371320, JSTOR 2371320, MR 0000043.
  2. ^ Friedman, Erich. "Circles Covering Circles". Retrieved 4 October 2021.

External links


Stub icon

This geometry-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: