Unsolved problems in geometry (Q1188966)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Unsolved problems in geometry
scientific article

    Statements

    Unsolved problems in geometry (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    17 September 1992
    0 references
    This book had its beginnings thirty years ago when the first author started to collect and circulate many unsolved problems in geometry. There was an initial large collection followed by several addenda. Although poorly printed (some problems in ``scribbles'') they were received with gratitude, copied and further circulated. The world of discrete geometers waited (and waited) for the book version to appear. There was a well-known conjecture that it would not appear in this century. But it has! Halleluya!! This volume is a source book for anyone wishing to pursue problems in convex, discrete and combinatorial geometry. Following the Preface there is a list of Other Problem Collections (17 entries) and a list of Standard References (26 entries). Then follow 6 sections, subdivided into subsections each containing a problem or a group of related problems ending with references for the subsection. The reader (of this review) may get a ``feel'' for the content of the book from the next part of the review which gives the titles of the sections, followed by the number of subsections and the titles of 3 ``sample'' subsections. \textbf{A. Convexity} (38): A5. Illumination problems; A14. Rotating polyhedra; A17. Isoperimetric inequalities and extremal problems. \textbf{B. Polygons, Polyhedra and Polytopes} (25): B10. Shadows of polyhedra; B14. Rigidity of frameworks; B20. Lengths of paths on polyhedra. \textbf{C. Tiling and Dissection} (20): C2. Squaring the square; C14. Which polygons tile the plane?; C20. Problems on equidecomposability. \textbf{D. Packing and Covering} (18): D3. Covering a circle with equal discs; D7. The problem of Tammes; D10. Packing balls in space. \textbf{E. Combinatorial Geometry} (14) E7. Neighborly convex bodies; E11. Sets that can be moved to cover several lattice points; E13. Variations on Minkowski's theorem. \textbf{F. Finite Sets of Points} (17): F1. Minimum number of distinct distances: F4. Can each distance occur a different number of times?; F12. Lines through sets of points. \textbf{G. General Geometric Problems} (16): G4. Maximal sets avoiding certain distance configurations; G12. Euclidean Ramsey problems; G16. Unions of similar copies of sets. In spite of the several decade gestation period there is evidence that the ``final'' manuscript was prepared in haste from the vast amount of information available. Readers should report errors (e.g., on page 150, \(r(4)=3\) should be \(r(4)=6\)) and new relevant results (e.g., a paper by Csima and Sawyer, to appear shortly in Discrete and Computational Geometry, is an important addition to F12) to the authors for consideration in preparing the second edition. Meanwhile, choose a problem from this wonderful collection and get cracking. And give thanks to C-F-G for this service to the community.
    0 references
    unsolved problems
    0 references
    discrete
    0 references
    geometry
    0 references
    convex
    0 references

    Identifiers