Squaring the square is the problem of
tiling an integral square using only other integral squares. (An integral square is a
square whose sides have
integer length.) The name was coined in a humorous analogy with
squaring the circle
Squaring the circle is a problem in geometry first proposed in Greek mathematics. It is the challenge of constructing a square with the area of a circle by using only a finite number of steps with a compass and straightedge. The difficulty ...
. Squaring the square is an easy task unless additional conditions are set. The most studied restriction is that the squaring be perfect, meaning the sizes of the smaller squares are all different. A related problem is squaring the plane, which can be done even with the restriction that each natural number occurs exactly once as a size of a square in the tiling. The order of a squared square is its number of constituent squares.
Perfect squared squares
A "perfect" squared square is a square such that each of the smaller squares has a different size.
It is first recorded as being studied by
R. L. Brooks,
C. A. B. Smith,
A. H. Stone and
W. T. Tutte
William Thomas Tutte OC FRS FRSC (; 14 May 1917 – 2 May 2002) was an English and Canadian codebreaker and mathematician. During the Second World War, he made a brilliant and fundamental advance in cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher, a majo ...
at Cambridge University between 1936 and 1938.
They transformed the square tiling into an equivalent
electrical circuit
An electrical network is an interconnection of electrical components (e.g., batteries, resistors, inductors, capacitors, switches, transistors) or a model of such an interconnection, consisting of electrical elements (e.g., voltage sources, ...
– they called it a "Smith diagram" – by considering the squares as
resistor
A resistor is a passive two-terminal electrical component that implements electrical resistance as a circuit element. In electronic circuits, resistors are used to reduce current flow, adjust signal levels, to divide voltages, bias active el ...
s that connected to their neighbors at their top and bottom edges, and then applied
Kirchhoff's circuit laws and
circuit decomposition
Circuit may refer to:
Science and technology
Electrical engineering
* Electrical circuit, a complete electrical network with a closed-loop giving a return path for current
** Analog circuit, uses continuous signal levels
** Balanced circu ...
techniques to that circuit. The first perfect squared squares they found were of order 69.
The first perfect squared square to be published, a compound one of side 4205 and order 55, was found by
Roland Sprague
Roland Percival Sprague (11 July 1894, Unterliederbach – 1 August 1967) was a German mathematician, known for the Sprague–Grundy theorem and for being the first mathematician to find a perfect squared square.
Biography
With two mathematicia ...
in 1939.
Martin Gardner published an extensive article written by
W. T. Tutte
William Thomas Tutte OC FRS FRSC (; 14 May 1917 – 2 May 2002) was an English and Canadian codebreaker and mathematician. During the Second World War, he made a brilliant and fundamental advance in cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher, a majo ...
about the early history of squaring the square in his
''Mathematical Games'' column in November 1958.
Simple squared squares
A "simple" squared square is one where no subset of more than one of the squares forms a rectangle or square, otherwise it is "compound".
In 1978, discovered a simple perfect squared square of side 112 with the smallest number of squares using a computer search. His tiling uses 21 squares, and has been proved to be minimal. This squared square forms the logo of the
Trinity Mathematical Society
The squared square upon which the Trinity Mathematical Society logo is based.
The Trinity Mathematical Society, abbreviated TMS, was founded in Trinity College, Cambridge in 1919 by G. H. Hardy to "promote the discussion of subjects of mathemati ...
. It also appears on the cover of the
Journal of Combinatorial Theory.
Duijvestijn also found two simple perfect squared squares of sides 110 but each comprising 22 squares. Theophilus Harding Willcocks, an amateur mathematician and
fairy chess composer, found another. In 1999, I. Gambini proved that these three are the smallest perfect squared squares in terms of side length.
The perfect compound squared square with the fewest squares was discovered by T.H. Willcocks in 1946 and has 24 squares; however, it was not until 1982 that Duijvestijn,
Pasquale Joseph Federico and P. Leeuw mathematically proved it to be the lowest-order example.
Mrs. Perkins's quilt
When the constraint of all the squares being different sizes is relaxed, a squared square such that the side lengths of the smaller squares do not have a common divisor larger than 1 is called a "Mrs. Perkins's quilt". In other words, the
greatest common divisor of all the smaller side lengths should be 1. The Mrs. Perkins's quilt problem asks for a Mrs. Perkins's quilt with the fewest pieces for a given
square. The number of pieces required is at least
, and at most
. Computer searches have found exact solutions for small values of
(small enough to need up to 18 pieces). For
the number of pieces required is:
No more than two different sizes
For any integer
other than 2, 3, and 5, it is possible to dissect a square into
squares of one or two different sizes.
Squaring the plane
In 1975,
Solomon Golomb
Solomon (; , ),, ; ar, سُلَيْمَان, ', , ; el, Σολομών, ; la, Salomon also called Jedidiah ( Hebrew: , Modern: , Tiberian: ''Yăḏīḏăyāh'', "beloved of Yah"), was a monarch of ancient Israel and the son and succe ...
raised the question whether the whole plane can be tiled by squares, one of each integer edge-length, which he called the heterogeneous tiling conjecture. This problem was later publicized by Martin Gardner in his
Scientific American column and appeared in several books, but it defied solution for over 30 years.
In ''Tilings and Patterns'', published in 1987,
Branko Grünbaum and G. C. Shephard stated that in all perfect integral tilings of the plane known at that time, the sizes of the squares
grew exponentially. For example, the plane can be tiled with different integral squares, but not for every integer, by recursively taking any perfect squared square and enlarging it so that the formerly smallest tile now has the size of the original squared square, then replacing this tile with a copy of the original squared square.
In 2008 James Henle and Frederick Henle proved that this, in fact, can be done. Their proof is constructive and proceeds by "puffing up" an L-shaped region formed by two side-by-side and horizontally flush squares of different sizes to a perfect tiling of a larger rectangular region, then adjoining the square of the smallest size not yet used to get another, larger L-shaped region. The squares added during the puffing up procedure have sizes that have not yet appeared in the construction and the procedure is set up so that the resulting rectangular regions are expanding in all four directions, which leads to a tiling of the whole plane.
Cubing the cube
Cubing the cube is the analogue in three dimensions of squaring the square: that is, given a
cube
In geometry, a cube is a three-dimensional solid object bounded by six square faces, facets or sides, with three meeting at each vertex. Viewed from a corner it is a hexagon and its net is usually depicted as a cross.
The cube is the only r ...
''C'', the problem of dividing it into finitely many smaller cubes, no two congruent.
Unlike the case of squaring the square, a hard yet solvable problem, there is no perfect cubed cube and, more generally, no dissection of a
rectangular cuboid ''C'' into a finite number of unequal cubes.
To prove this, we start with the following claim: for any perfect dissection of a ''rectangle'' in squares, the smallest square in this dissection does not lie on an edge of the rectangle. Indeed, each corner square has a smaller adjacent edge square, and the smallest edge square is adjacent to smaller squares not on the edge.
Now suppose that there is a perfect dissection of a rectangular cuboid in cubes. Make a face of ''C'' its horizontal base. The base is divided into a perfect squared rectangle ''R'' by the cubes which rest on it. The smallest square ''s''
1 in ''R'' is surrounded by ''larger'', and therefore ''higher'', cubes. Hence the upper face of the cube on ''s''
1 is divided into a perfect squared square by the cubes which rest on it. Let ''s''
2 be the smallest square in this dissection. By the claim above, this is surrounded on all 4 sides by squares which are larger than ''s''
2 and therefore higher.
The sequence of squares ''s''
1, ''s''
2, ... is infinite and the corresponding cubes are infinite in number. This contradicts our original supposition.
If a 4-dimensional
hypercube
In geometry, a hypercube is an ''n''-dimensional analogue of a square () and a cube (). It is a closed, compact, convex figure whose 1- skeleton consists of groups of opposite parallel line segments aligned in each of the space's dimensions, ...
could be perfectly hypercubed then its 'faces' would be perfect cubed cubes; this is impossible. Similarly, there is no solution for all cubes of higher dimensions.
See also
*
Square packing in a square
References
External links
*Perfect squared squares:
**, Eindhoven University of Technology, Faculty of Mathematics and Computing Science
**http://www.squaring.net/
**http://www.maa.org/editorial/mathgames/mathgames_12_01_03.html
**http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/navigation/ideas/articles/honsberger2/index.shtml
**https://web.archive.org/web/20030419012114/http://www.math.niu.edu/~rusin/known-math/98/square_dissect
*Nowhere-neat squared squares:
**http://karlscherer.com/
*Mrs. Perkins's quilt:
Mrs. Perkins's Quilton
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