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Topic: Diagonals of a polygon. (Read 3914 times) |
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Grimbal
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Diagonals of a polygon.
« on: May 13th, 2007, 3:11pm » |
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I took part in a logical and mathematical games contest. One of the problem was (story removed): There is a convex hexagon such that - all sides have a different length, - all 3 diagonals are concurrent - the vertices lie on the vertices of a regular N-sided polygon. What is the minimum possible N? As a starter, the given answer was an odd number, but in my opinion it can not be because by experience (i.e. computer), no 3 digaonals of a regular N-sided polygon are concurrent for N odd. Does anybody know a good argument for that?
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Barukh
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #1 on: May 13th, 2007, 11:05pm » |
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on May 13th, 2007, 3:11pm, Grimbal wrote:- the vertices lie on the vertices of a regular N-sided polygon. |
| Shouldn't this be "on the sides of a regular N-gon?
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towr
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #2 on: May 14th, 2007, 12:46am » |
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on May 13th, 2007, 11:05pm, Barukh wrote: Shouldn't this be "on the sides of a regular N-gon? |
| My guess would be no. You want the diagonals of the hexagon to coincide with those of the N-gon, so it has to be vertices in both cases.
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« Last Edit: May 14th, 2007, 12:47am by towr » |
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Wikipedia, Google, Mathworld, Integer sequence DB
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Grimbal
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #3 on: May 14th, 2007, 2:10am » |
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As towr said. The vertices of the hexagon are a subset of those of a regular N-gon.
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« Last Edit: May 14th, 2007, 2:43am by Grimbal » |
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Barukh
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #4 on: May 14th, 2007, 8:32am » |
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I see. Grimbal, your assumption is true. I don't know if there is a simple argument to prove it, though. Maybe, the following is of some help.
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Grimbal
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #5 on: May 14th, 2007, 9:56am » |
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Thanks. It shows that identifying concurrent diagonals is far from trivial and cannot be solved in the hour I had, not without prior knowledge of the problem. But in the introduction it refers to an earlier paper: Herman Heineken, "Regelmässige Vielecke und ihre Diagonalen", 1962. He proves that an odd-gon has no 3 concurrent diagonals, using complex polynomials.
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« Last Edit: May 14th, 2007, 9:57am by Grimbal » |
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balakrishnan
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #6 on: Aug 5th, 2007, 5:37pm » |
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I get 8 as the smallest N.
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Obob
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #7 on: Aug 5th, 2007, 10:55pm » |
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You cannot choose six vertices of an octagon in such a way that the consecutive distances between adjacent vertices are all different.
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balakrishnan
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #8 on: Aug 6th, 2007, 5:05am » |
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Sorry I overlooked the problem. I get N=24.
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Grimbal
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Re: Diagonals of a polygon.
« Reply #9 on: Aug 8th, 2007, 5:39am » |
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Yep. That's what I got later with a computer program.
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