1971 IMO Problems/Problem 5
Contents
[hide]Problem
Prove that for every natural number ; there exists a finite set
of points in a plane with the following property: For every point
in
; there are exactly
points in
which are at unit distance from
.
Solution 1
I shall prove a more general statement about the unit distance graph(, adjacency iff the Euclidean distance between the points is
) and this will follow as a consequence.
if
occur as unit distance graphs, then so does
( here
is described as
or
).
this is seen by describing the vertices by complex numbers. suppose there is an embedding of
by the complex numbers
and for
by the numbers
. we claim that for some choice of
,
will do the job(a suitable rotation).
what we need is that
iff either
or
. clearly if the condition holds then the adjacency is satisfied. suppose
and that the corresponding complex numbers are at a distance
from one another. Then this gives a quadratic in
and hence
can take only finitely many values here.ruling this out for each such set of
hence rules out finitely many values of
and therefore a suitable choice exists.
for the given problem we need a unit distance graph which is regular of degree
for any given
. since we can form the graph
, we can form
(the unit cube) and that solves the problem.
This solution was posted and copyrighted by seshadri. The original thread for this problem can be found here: [1]
Solution 2
Suppose has the form
where
is unknown set of distinct unit vectors in
. We can build
inductively, starting from the empty set and adding vectors to it, one by one. We just need to make sure that two thing are respected:
1. All
vectors in
are distinct;
2. Two vector sums are at unit distance from one another if and only if they differ in presence of exactly one summand (i.e. one and only one coefficient
in the sum changes from
to
).
If these two conditions are kept, then each of
points at
will be at unit distance from exactly
points corresponding to sums at which one and only one of
coefficients differs from coefficients of this point. However, respecting these conditions is not hard because
and for each new vector being added to
there is at most some finite set of forbidden endpoints given by sums/differences of already determined vectors but the rest of the (infinite) unit circle is permissible.
This solution was posted and copyrighted by Bandera. The original thread for this problem can be found here: [2]
See Also
1971 IMO (Problems) • Resources | ||
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