- Sphere packing
In
mathematics , sphere packing problems are problems concerning arrangements of non-overlapping identicalsphere s which fill a space. Usually the space involved is three-dimension alEuclidean space . However, sphere packing problems can be generalised to two dimensional space (where the "spheres" arecircle s), to "n"-dimensional space (where the "spheres" arehypersphere s) and to non-Euclidean spaces such ashyperbolic space .A typical sphere packing problem is to find an arrangement in which the spheres fill as large a proportion of the space as possible. The proportion of space filled by the spheres is called the density of the arrangement. As the density of an arrangement can vary depending on the volume over which it is measured, the problem is usually to maximise the
average orasymptotic density, measured over a large enough volume.A regular arrangement (also called a periodic or lattice arrangement) is one in which the centres of the spheres form a very symmetric pattern called a lattice. Arrangements in which the spheres are not arranged in a lattice are called irregular or
aperiodic arrangements. Regular arrangements are easier to handle than irregular ones—their high degree ofsymmetry makes it easier to classify them and to measure their densities.Circle packing
In two dimensional Euclidean space,
Carl Friedrich Gauss proved that the regular arrangement of circles with the highest density is thehexagon al packing arrangement, in which the centres of the circles are arranged in a hexagonal lattice (staggered rows, like ahoneycomb ), and each circle is surrounded by 6 other circles. The density of this arrangement is:
In 1940, Hungarian mathematician
László Fejes Tóth proved that the hexagonal lattice is the densest of all possible circle packings, both regular and irregular. [MathWorld|urlname=CirclePacking |title=Circle Packing ]The branch of mathematics generally known as "circle packing", however, is not concerned with dense packing of equal-sized circles but with the geometry and combinatorics of packings of arbitrarily-sized circles; these give rise to discrete analogs of
conformal mapping ,Riemann surface s and the like.phere packing
Regular packing
In three-dimensional Euclidean space, let us consider a plane with a compact arrangement of spheres on it. If we consider three neighbouring spheres, we can put a fourth sphere in the hollow between the three bottom spheres. If we do this "everywhere" in a second plane above the first, we create a new compact arrangement. The third layer can superimpose to the first one, or the spheres can be upon a hollow of the first layer. There are thus three types of planes, called A, B and C.
Gauss proved these arrangements have the highest density amongst the regular arrangements.
The two most common arrangements are called cubic
close packing (or face centred cubic) — ABCABC… alternance — and hexagonal close packing — ABAB… alternance. But all combinations are possible (ABAC, ABCBA, ABCBAC, etc.). In all of these arrangements each sphere is surrounded by 12 other spheres, and both arrangements have an average density of:
In 1611
Johannes Kepler had conjectured that this is the maximum possible density for both regular and irregular arrangements — this became known as theKepler conjecture . In 1998 Thomas Hales, following the approach suggested byLászló Fejes Tóth in 1953, announced the proof of the Kepler conjecture. Hales' proof is aproof by exhaustion involving checking of many individual cases using complex computer calculations. Referees have said that they are "99% certain" of the correctness of Hales' proof, so the Kepler conjecture has almost certainly been proved.Irregular packing
If we attempt to build a densely packed collection of spheres, we will be tempted to always place the next sphere in a hollow between three packed spheres. If five spheres are assembled in this way, they will be consistent with one of the regularly packed arrangements described above. However, the sixth sphere placed in this way will render the structure inconsistent with any regular arrangement. (Chaikin, 2007). This results in the possibility of a
random close pack ing of spheres which is stable against compression.When spheres are randomly added to a container and then compressed, they will generally form what is known as an "irregular" or "jammed" packing configuration when they can be compressed no more. This irregular packing will generally have a density of about 64%. This situation is unlike the case of one or two dimensions, where compressing a collection of 1-dimensional or 2-dimensional spheres (i.e. line segments or disks) will yield a regular packing.
Hypersphere packing
In dimensions higher than three, the densest regular packings of hyperspheres are known up to 8 dimensions. [MathWorld |title=Hypersphere Packing|urlname=HyperspherePacking] Very little is known about irregular hypersphere packings — it is possible that in some dimensions the densest packing may be irregular. Some support for this conjecture comes from the fact that in certain dimensions (e.g. 10) the densest known irregular packing is denser than the densest known regular packing.
Dimension 24 is special due to the existence of the
Leech lattice , which has the bestkissing number and for a long time was suspected to be the densest lattice packing. In 2004, Cohn and Kumar1 published a preprint proving this conjecture, and in addition showing that an irregular packing may improve over the Leech lattice packing, if at all, by no more than 2e|-30.Another line of research in high dimensions is trying to find
asymptotic bounds for the density of the densest packings. Currently the best known result is that there exists a lattice in dimension "n" with density bigger or equal to for some number "c".Hyperbolic space
Although the concept of circles and spheres can be extended to hyperbolic space, finding the densest packing becomes much more difficult. In a hyperbolic space there is no limit to the number of spheres that can surround another sphere (for example,
Ford circle s can be thought of as an arrangement of identical hyperbolic circles in which each circle is surrounded by aninfinite number of other circles). The concept of average density also becomes much more difficult to define accurately.Despite these difficulties,
Charles Radin andLewis Bowen of theUniversity of Texas at Austin showed in May 2002 that the densest packings in any hyperbolic space are almost always irregular.Other spaces
Sphere packing on the corners of a hypercube (with the spheres defined by
Hamming distance ) corresponds to designingerror-correcting codes : if the spheres have radius "d", then their centers are codewords of a "d"-error-correcting code. Lattice packings correspond to linear codes. There are other, subtler relationships between Euclidean sphere packing and error-correcting codes; thus, thebinary Golay code is closely related to the 24-dimensionalLeech lattice .ee also
*
Apollonian sphere packing
*Close-packing
*Hermite constant
*Kissing number problem
*Sphere-packing bound References
* Conway, J.H. & Sloane, N.J.H. (1998) "Sphere Packings, Lattices and Groups" (Third Edition). ISBN 0-387-98585-9
* Lewis Bowen & Charles Radin (2003) [ftp://ftp.ma.utexas.edu/pub/papers/radin/hyper.pdf "Densest Packings of Equal Spheres in Hyperbolic Space"] (pre-print of article in "Discrete & Computational Geometry")
* N. J. A. Sloane, "The Sphere Packing Problem", arxiv
archive =math.CO
id =0207256 (A technical survey from 2002).
* C. A. Rogers, "Existence Theorems in the Geometry of Numbers", The Annals of Mathematics, 2nd Ser., 48:4 (1947), 994-1002 (The result mentioned above. Despite 60 years of research, only the constant was improved in this result).
* Henry Cohn and Abhinav Kumar, "The densest lattice in twenty-four dimensions", arxiv
archive =math.MG
id =0403263(The solution for the 24 dimensional case).
* T. Aste and D. Weaire "The Pursuit of Perfect Packing" (Institute Of Physics Publishing London 2000) ISBN 0-7503-0648-3
* Chaikin, Paul "Reference Frame", Physics Today, June 2007 p8.In popular culture
*
Kurt Vonnegut Jr. 's novel,Cat's Cradle , mentions a chemicalIce 9 which is made based on the principles of being able to stack cannon balls in different ways.Ice 9 is a fictional H2O molecule that is stacked in a certain way which makes it turn any water it touches intoIce 9 .External links
* Dana Mackenzie (May 2002) [http://www.ma.utexas.edu/users/radin/reviews/newscientist2.html "A fine mess"] (New Scientist):A non-technical overview of packing in hyperbolic space.
* [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CirclePacking.html "Circle Packing"] (Wolfram MathWorld)
* [http://www.3doro.de/e-kp.htm "Kugelpackungen (Sphere Packing)"] (T.E. Dorozinski)
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