Simple polygons with an infinite sequence of deflations (Q5948409)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1669207
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English | Simple polygons with an infinite sequence of deflations |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1669207 |
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Simple polygons with an infinite sequence of deflations (English)
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18 November 2001
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P. Erdős was the first to propose the usage of flips for convexifying a simply closed polygon in the plane. Here a flip stands for the following: Take a line of support of a non convex polygon: This divides the polygon into two parts. Reflect one part at the line of support and fit this together with the other part. This procedure has been studied by a series of authors and had been called an ``inflation'' in recent publications. There is an obvious inverse of this procedure, with the requirement that no self-intersections should occur. This is called ``deflation'', and there are closed polygons which cannot be deflated. The authors give an example of a quadrangle for which deflation can be iterated infinitely many times. This gives a counterexample to a conjecture made in \textit{B. Wegner} [Beitr. Algebra Geom. 34, 77-85 (1993; Zbl 0772.52004)] that for every polygon these iterations come to a non-deflatable end. For inflations the procedure always will stop after a finite number of iterations.
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deflation
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inflation
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quadrangle
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