Shephard's problem
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In mathematics, Shephard's problem is the following geometrical question: if K and L are centrally symmetric convex bodies in n-dimensional Euclidean space such that whenever K and L are projected onto a hyperplane, the volume of the projection of K is smaller than the volume of the projection of L, then does it follow that the volume of K is smaller than that of L?
In this case, "centrally symmetric" means that the reflection of K in the origin, −K, is a translate of K, and similarly for L. If πk : Rn → Πk is a projection of Rn onto some k-dimensional hyperplane Πk (not necessarily a coordinate hyperplane) and Vk denotes k-dimensional volume, Shephard's problem is to determine the truth or falsity of the implication
Vk(πk(K)) is sometimes known as the brightness of K and the function Vk o πk as a (k-dimensional) brightness function.
In dimensions n = 1 and 2, the answer to Shephard's problem is "yes". In 1967, however, Petty and Schneider showed that the answer is "no" for every n ≥ 3. The solution of Shephard's problem requires Minkowski's first inequality for convex bodies.
[edit] References
- Gardner, Richard J. (2002). "The Brunn-Minkowski inequality". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.) 39 (3): 355–405 (electronic). doi: .
- Petty, C.M. (1967). "Projection bodies". Proc. Colloquium on Convexity (Copenhagen, 1965): 234–241. Kobenhavns Univ. Mat. Inst., Copenhagen.
- Schneider, Rolf (1967). "Zur einem Problem von Shephard über die Projektionen konvexer Körper" (in German). Math. Z. 101: 71–82. doi: .