Let A, B, and C be spheres that are tangent pairwise and whose points of tangency are distinct. Let {D1, D2, ..., Dn} be a set of spheres each of which is tangent to spheres A, B, and C. For i = 1 to n, Di is externally tangent to Di+1 (where Dn+1 = D1).
What is the value of n?
I notice that the only place where spheres must be
externally tangent is between D spheres. D spheres may be internally tangent to spheres A, B, and C.
Since the points of tangency for A, B, and C are distinct, they can't
all be internally tanget to each other, but it is possible for A to
contain spheres B and C, while B and C are externally tangent to each
other.
I believe that the problem is asking us to maximize n.
How about this solution for n=3: the D spheres coincide with A,
B, and C (assuming A, B, and C are externally tangent to one
another).
But... I'm not sure whether one sphere is really considered tangent to another if they coincide.
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Posted by Tristan
on 2005-11-03 18:04:43 |