Inn dimensions, where a point is ann-tuple of coordinate values { x1, x2, x3, ... , ,xn }, the unit sphere is the locus of points for which
x12+ x22 + x32 + ... + xn2 = 1.
In one dimension this is a pair of points that encloses a volume (length) of 2 and comprises a surface area of 0. In two dimensions it's a circle that encloses a volume (area) of pi and comprises a surface area (circumference) of 2pi.
So the enclosed volume and surface area both start out, at least, as increasing functions of n.
What happens as n continues to increase?
Puzzle: Is there a value of n for which the volume reaches a maximum?
Question
bonanova
This puzzle is inspired by the seventh of Rocdocmac's Difficult Sequences:
In n dimensions, where a point is an n-tuple of coordinate values { x1, x2, x3, ... , ,xn },
the unit sphere is the locus of points for which
x12+ x22 + x32 + ... + xn2 = 1.
In one dimension this is a pair of points that encloses a volume (length) of 2 and comprises a surface area of 0. In two dimensions it's a circle that encloses a volume (area) of pi and comprises a surface area (circumference) of 2 pi.
So the enclosed volume and surface area both start out, at least, as increasing functions of n.
What happens as n continues to increase?
Puzzle: Is there a value of n for which the volume reaches a maximum?
Bonus question: What about the surface area?
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