Most Reinhardt polygons are sporadic
Abstract
A Reinhardt polygon is a convex n-gon that, for n not a power of 2, is optimal in three different geometric optimization problems, for example, it has maximal perimeter relative to its diameter. Some such polygons exhibit a particular periodic structure; others are termed sporadic. Prior work has described the periodic case completely, and has shown that sporadic Reinhardt polygons occur for all n of the form n=pqr with p and q distinct odd primes and r≥2. We show that (dihedral equivalence classes of) sporadic Reinhardt polygons outnumber the periodic ones for almost all n, and find that this first occurs at n=105. We also determine a formula for the number of sporadic Reinhardt polygons when n=2pq with p and q distinct odd primes.
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