Extremal problems on triangle areas in two and three dimensions

Adrian Dumitrescu*, Micha Sharir, Csaba D. Tóth

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The study of extremal problems on triangle areas was initiated in a series of papers by Erdo″s and Purdy in the early 1970s. Here we present new results on such problems, concerning the number of triangles of the same area that are spanned by finite point sets in the plane and in 3-space, and the number of distinct areas determined by the triangles. In the plane, our main result is an O(n44/19) = O(n2.3158) upper bound on the number of unit-area triangles spanned by n points, which is the first improvement of the classical bound of O(n7/3) from 1992. We also make progress in a number of important special cases: We show: (i) For points in convex position, there exist n-element point sets that span Ω(n log n) triangles of unit area, (ii) The number of triangles of minimum (nonzero) area determined by n points is at most 2/3(n2 - n); there exist n-element point sets (for arbitrarily large n) that span (6/π2 - o(1))n 2 minimum-area triangles, (iii) The number of acute triangles of minimum area determined by n points is O(n); this is asymptotically tight, (iv) For n points in convex position, the number of triangles of minimum area is O(n); this is asymptotically tight, (v) If no there points are allowed to be collinear, there are n-element point sets that span Ω(n log n) minimum-area triangles (in contrast to (ii), where collinearities are allowed and a quadratic lower bound holds). In 3-space we prove an O(n17/7 β(n)) = O(n2.4286) upper bound on the number of unit-area triangles spanned by n points, where β(n) is an extremely slowly growing function related to the inverse Ackermann function. The best previous bound, O(n8/3), is another classical result of Erdo″s and Purdy from 1971.We further show, for point sets in 3-space: (i) The number of minimum nonzero area triangles is at most n2 + O(n), and this is worst-case optimal, up to a constant factor, (ii) There are n-element point sets that span Ω(n4/3) triangles of maximum area, all incident to a common point. In any n-element point set, the maximum number of maximum-area triangles incident to a common point is O(n4/3+ε), for any ε > 0. (iii) Every set of n points, not all on a line, determines at least Ω(n2/3 / β(n)) triangles of distinct areas, which share a common side.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 24th Annual Symposium on Computational Geometry 2008, SCG'08
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery
Pages208-217
Number of pages10
ISBN (Print)9781605580715
DOIs
StatePublished - 2008
Event24th Annual Symposium on Computational Geometry, SCG'08 - College Park, MD, United States
Duration: 9 Jun 200811 Jun 2008

Publication series

NameProceedings of the Annual Symposium on Computational Geometry

Conference

Conference24th Annual Symposium on Computational Geometry, SCG'08
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityCollege Park, MD
Period9/06/0811/06/08

Funding

FundersFunder number
National Science Foundation0444188

    Keywords

    • Discrete geometry
    • Distinct triangle areas
    • Extremal combinatorics
    • Maximum triangle areas
    • Minimum triangle areas
    • Point configurations
    • Unit triangle areas

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