Loren Booda
- 3,115
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How many cubes of side 1 centimeter can fit into a sphere of diameter 3 centimeters?
The discussion revolves around the problem of fitting cubes of side 1 centimeter into a sphere of diameter 3 centimeters. Participants explore various configurations and mathematical reasoning related to the volume and spatial arrangement of the cubes within the sphere.
Participants do not reach a consensus on the number of cubes that can fit into the sphere, with multiple competing views remaining on the arrangement and maximum number of cubes.
Discussions include various assumptions about the cubes' arrangement, whether they can intersect the sphere, and the implications of geometric configurations on the fitting of cubes.
Mark44 said:I'll say 8.
Since the volume of such a sphere is ~ 9.42 cm3, no more than 9 unbroken cubes could possibly fit into this sphere
Dickfore said:I would say 6.
DaveC426913 said:Arranged how?
Dickfore said:Imagine a cube with all vertices on one of its side touching the sphere. The height of the spherical cap cut by the opposite side of the cube is:
Therefore, we cannot accommodate a single extra cube in this internal cube.
DaveC426913 said:Uh. OK. So arranged how? You said six cubes. How do you see them being arranged?
Dickfore said:Imagine a Cartesian coordinate system. It cuts the sphere at six points. You place the cubes "near" these points.
DaveC426913 said:Still having trouble.
1] Seems to me it would cut the sphere via planes, not points.
2] Do these 6 cubes touch each other?
Oh, I think I see. We're all building a mass of cubes glued together in the middle. You're attaching the cubes to the inside surface of the sphere. So, they touch the sphere at 6 equidistant points. They may or may not touch each other.
Right.Dickfore said:Ahh:
They will block each other. In this way, I will only be able to put 2.
DaveC426913 said:I say 4, arranged tetrahedrally.
Mark44 said:I'll say 8.
Since the volume of such a sphere is ~ 9.42 cm3, no more than 9 unbroken cubes could possibly fit into this sphere
Loren Booda said:How many cubes of side 1 centimeter can fit into a sphere of diameter 3 centimeters?
Dickfore said:There can definitely be 4 cubes. Just order them to form a square prism with side 2 and height 1. Here is the relevant diagram.
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tauon said:can you upload that image to imageshack or something? I'd like to see it and it's saying "pending attachment aproval" on my end... :(
Loren Booda said:My guess is that the tetrahedron, if it fits, would be asymmetric. Please describe your array.