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In 1995, Tokarsky found the first polygonal unilluminable room which had 4 sides and two fixed boundary points. [2] He also in 1996 found a 20-sided unilluminable room with two distinct interior points. In 1997, two different 24-sided rooms with the same properties were put forward by George Tokarsky and David Castro separately. [3] [4]
The triangle inequality is a defining property of norms and measures of distance. This property must be established as a theorem for any function proposed for such purposes for each particular space: for example, spaces such as the real numbers, Euclidean spaces, the L p spaces (p ≥ 1), and inner product spaces.
Erdős–Mordell inequality. Let be an arbitrary point P inside a given triangle , and let , , and be the perpendiculars from to the sides of the triangles. (If the triangle is obtuse, one of these perpendiculars may cross through a different side of the triangle and end on the line supporting one of the sides.)
The parameters most commonly appearing in triangle inequalities are: the side lengths a, b, and c;; the semiperimeter s = (a + b + c) / 2 (half the perimeter p);; the angle measures A, B, and C of the angles of the vertices opposite the respective sides a, b, and c (with the vertices denoted with the same symbols as their angle measures);
A Saccheri quadrilateral is a quadrilateral with two sides of equal length, both perpendicular to a side called the base. The other two angles of a Saccheri quadrilateral are called the summit angles and they have equal measure. The summit angles of a Saccheri quadrilateral are acute if the geometry is hyperbolic, right angles if the geometry ...
The reverse inequality follows from the same argument as the standard Minkowski, but uses that Holder's inequality is also reversed in this range. Using the Reverse Minkowski, we may prove that power means with p ≤ 1 , {\textstyle p\leq 1,} such as the harmonic mean and the geometric mean are concave.
The sides of a triangle (line segments) that come together at a vertex form two angles (four angles if you consider the sides of the triangle to be lines instead of line segments). [3] Only one of these angles contains the third side of the triangle in its interior, and this angle is called an interior angle of the triangle. [4]
The isoperimetric inequality states that , and that the equality holds if and only if the curve is a circle. The area of a disk of radius R is πR 2 and the circumference of the circle is 2πR, so both sides of the inequality are equal to 4π 2 R 2 in this case.