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Parabolas hugging a hexagon (Posted on 2023-07-07) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Part 1:
Regular hexagon ABCDEF is surrounded by two parabolas. One contains A,B,C,D and the other contains D,E,F,A. What is the ratio between the area of the intersection of the parabola's interiors to the area of the hexagon?

Part 2:
Regular hexagon ABCDEF is surrounded by two parabolas. One contains A,B,C,D and the other contains C,D,E,F. What is the ratio between the area of the intersection of the parabola's interiors to the area of the hexagon?

Part 3:
Regular hexagon ABCDEF is surrounded by two parabolas. One contains A,B,C,D and the other contains B,C,D,E. What is the ratio between the area of the intersection of the parabola's interiors to the area of the hexagon?

No Solution Yet Submitted by Jer    
Rating: 4.3333 (3 votes)

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Summary of results | Comment 7 of 8 |
The solutions are:

Part 1: (2nd parabola rotated 180 degrees), ratio = 32/27

Part 2: (2nd parabola rotated 120 degrees), ratio = 35/27

Part 3: (2nd parabola rotated 60 degrees),  ratio = 59/27

The links above show all the calculations. One can see that the
integrals had to be done carefully to find the rational ratios
above. (Approximations from simulations could not definitively
assure the ratios are indeed rational fractions, although they 
did help to check the results.

Some inventive integration methods were devised, especially for
Case 2, the most difficult case. The integration difficulty
originated from the fact that the rotated parabolas are mathematically
complex and not necessarily functions at all. 
See: http://www.math-principles.com/2014/11/rotation-of-parabola-2.html

It is surprising that the two irrational areas, when ratioed, 
yield a rational number. The most amazing part of the result is that 
the denominators of each ratio are the same, as if pointing to 
some deeper connection between the hexagon area (irrational) 
and the positioning of each parabola on the vertices of the 
hexagon, that produced that irrational overlap area. 

Is there any literature on this provocative result? 

In the following post: "More hugging" I explore whether 
these rational rations will pop up if the problem is done 
with other polygons than a hexagon  

Edited on July 31, 2023, 1:41 am
  Posted by Steven Lord on 2023-07-13 17:42:35

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