Jump to content
BrainDen.com - Brain Teasers
  • 0

May 2013 POM - Puzzle-of-the-Month - Golf ball Dimples


BMAD
 Share

Question

A regulation golf ball is spherical and has 384 dimples, arranged in a triangular pattern. Most of the dimples are surrounded by six other dimples, but some are surrounded by only five. How many dimples have only five neighbors?
  • Upvote 1
  • Downvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

OK I have it.

 


If we draw blue lines to connect dimples with their nearest neighbors and red lines as perpendicular bisectors of the blue lines, the red lines form the edges of a polyhedron. They make hexagons around dimples with six nearest neighbors and pentagons around dimples with five. Each edge is common to two faces, and each vertex is common to three faces.

In forming the polyhedron, hexagons and pentagons each contribute 1 face, but they contribute differently to the edge and vertex count: each hexagon associates with (6/2=3) edges and (6/3=2) vertices, while each pentagon pairs with (5/2) edges and (5/3) vertices. Euler says these numbers grow and decrease in lock-step. They are not independent. For any polyhedron,

faces + vertices - edges = 2.

Let's add things up.

f  =  h + p            (total faces = #hexagons + #pentagons)
v = 2h + (5/3)p     (total vertices)
e = 3h + (5/2)p     (total edges)

6f  =  6h +  6p
6v = 12h + 10p
6e = 18h + 15p

6(f+v-e) = 6(2) = (6+12-18)h + (6+10-15)p

p = 12.

Note that Euler places no restrictions on the number of hexagons: they can tile the infinite plane.
But to close that tiled surface into a polyhedron requires us to add somewhere to the mix exactly 12 pentagons.

 

So on that golf ball, populated mainly by dimples having 6 nearest neighbors,

somewhere there are 12 dimples that have 5 nearest neighbors.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

Twelve.

Hexagons infinitely tile the plane, while pentagons (12

of them) tile the fifth platonic solid - the dodecahedron.

It takes vertices that join polygons with angles totaling

less than 360 to create a "curved" non-planar surface.

Since 12 pentagons do it for the dodecahedron, I'm

betting 12 instances of a dimple being surrounded by

(only) 5 other dimples do the same thing for a golf ball.

The remaining "hexagonaly" placed dimples form (distorted

planar) regions that cover the ball among these twelve

curvature-generating points.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

Twelve.

Hexagons infinitely tile the plane, while pentagons (12

of them) tile the fifth platonic solid - the dodecahedron.

It takes vertices that join polygons with angles totaling

less than 360 to create a "curved" non-planar surface.

Since 12 pentagons do it for the dodecahedron, I'm

betting 12 instances of a dimple being surrounded by

(only) 5 other dimples do the same thing for a golf ball.

The remaining "hexagonaly" placed dimples form (distorted

planar) regions that cover the ball among these twelve

curvature-generating points.

but can someone prove it?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

The dodecahedron is a proof by construction:

  1. Tile the 12 pentagonal faces with hexagons.
  2. Deform the surface into a sphere.

What is left to prove? possibly,

  1. Show that no other construction (with a number different from twelve) exists.
  2. Put the statements of the above proof into equations.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0


Hexagons tile the plane.
The surface of a sphere closes upon itself.
If we wrap the plane into a cylinder, leaving an axis, a hex tiling can absorb the closure.
But closing perpendicular to the axis as well, disturbs the tiling in a way that forces the angles at some nodes to sum less than 360.

Perhaps there is a consequence regarding nodes and edges (governed by Euler's rule) that would dictate how many of these points have to occur. That could then be a proof. But I don't know how to formulate it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 0

Hexagons tile the plane.

The surface of a sphere closes upon itself.

If we wrap the plane into a cylinder, leaving an axis, a hex tiling can absorb the closure.

But closing perpendicular to the axis as well, disturbs the tiling in a way that forces the angles at some nodes to sum less than 360.

Perhaps there is a consequence regarding nodes and edges (governed by Euler's rule) that would dictate how many of these points have to occur. That could then be a proof. But I don't know how to formulate it.

Yes...using Euler is the way to go in the proof.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Answer this question...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...