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  • Such was the confusion in this round, I believed I had to make more than 315, so, geometry failed me, to find more I tried it practically

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    • Originally Posted by moglet View Post
      Oh dear!

      [ATTACH]1907[/ATTACH]
      Absolutely brilliant moglet ...
      Proud winner of the 2008 Bahrain Championship Lucky Dip
      http://ronnieosullivan.tv/forum/index.php

      Comment


      • Very nice moglet! 315 indeed! (And yes, the geometry does work - you would have another 0.96% width of a snooker ball spare at the top under this arrangement.) Just where did you get all those coins? Now you have to show it with snooker balls

        There are other arrangements possible - any others to go up on the thread?
        "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
        David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

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        • Originally Posted by davis_greatest View Post
          Very nice moglet! 315 indeed! (And yes, the geometry does work - you would have another 0.96% width of a snooker ball spare at the top under this arrangement.) Just where did you get all those coins? Now you have to show it with snooker balls

          There are other arrangements possible - any others to go up on the thread?
          I always knew they would come in useful one day

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          • well, here is my wobbly one, is only in scrap-book quality, but goes up as is now, might be worked over later on, but very possibly not, as can't beat moglet's coins anyway

            balls-4.bmp
            left side, the box filled neatly in rows and columns
            right side:
            9 rows of 17 balls each
            9 rows of 16 balls each
            last wobbled row with 18 balls (those red ones, ignore all other circles there)

            Comment


            • Originally Posted by moglet View Post
              Oh dear!

              [ATTACH]1907[/ATTACH]
              Wow, Moglet, you are rich!!!

              This is my pic - not as golden...
              Attached Files

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              • But cute colours.

                Originally Posted by abextra View Post
                Wow, Moglet, you are rich!!!

                This is my pic - not as golden...

                Comment


                • Originally Posted by PaulTheSoave View Post
                  But cute colours.

                  Thank you, Paul! Tried to make the counting easier...

                  Comment


                  • I dont mind, I am not the quiz master.

                    Originally Posted by abextra View Post
                    Thank you, Paul! Tried to make the counting easier...

                    Comment


                    • Thank you also snookersfun and abextra for the pictures for 315 balls! Showing that there are some very different ways of getting this.

                      Given the (infinite) number of possible arrangements to make use of the gaps, it is far from easy here to prove what is the maximum possible (other than showing that 333 must be an upper bound) - although I suspect that 315 cannot be improved upon for the dimensions of Charlie's box.
                      "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                      David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                      Comment


                      • Well I think here is a proof that indeed 315 is the maximum.
                        Obviously in a single row we can have a maximum of 17 balls. If all rows are of 17 balls we can only have 17 rows, center of balls being aligned parallelly to the sides of the box. "Shifting" the balls in one row of of two allows to get squeeze more rows in the box at the price of having one row out of 2 featuring 16 balls instead of 17, because a shifted row can only fit 16 balls in the 17 size box. The maximum number of rows being achieved if the balls are organised at 60° angles like in the snooker triangle. For such arrangement the total "lenght" of a set of n rows is 1+(n-1)*sqrt(3)/2.
                        We all found out that n can be maximum 19 if the size of the box is 17. With all rows in 60° pattern we have 314 balls and some space left. To get 315 balls we must introduce one more row of 17 balls, so mixing 60° pattern - in 16 rows - and 90° pattern - in 3 rows. For 316 balls we would need a 14 rows 60° pattern and 5 rows 90° pattern...

                        Now if k is the maximum number of rows in 90° pattern we can achieve in the 17 size box, we must have k the biggest integer such as k+1 <= (17-19*SQRT(3)/2)/(1-SQRT(3)/2) which yields k=3 as a maximum. Hence 315 balls is the maximum.

                        Hope this makes sense ...
                        Proud winner of the 2008 Bahrain Championship Lucky Dip
                        http://ronnieosullivan.tv/forum/index.php

                        Comment


                        • Thanks Monique. The weakness in this, however, is that it unfortunately assumes that all balls must be placed in straight rows, which is not necessarily the case. We need also to consider the combinations of wobbly rows (or other arrangements) that could be produced!
                          "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                          David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                          Comment


                          • Round 362 - Chess with balls

                            Gordon is playing snooker against Charlie, while Oliver, who has spent the whole weekend playing chess, referees.

                            Gordon makes a total clearance, while Oliver proceeds to record it by colouring in his old 6x6 grid scoreboard. When Gordon pots his first red, Oliver colours in a square red. For each following shot, Oliver proceeds to move around the board 2 squares in one direction and one square the other (at right angles) - rather like a knight moves in chess, colouring the square in the same colour as the ball potted.

                            Once Oliver has coloured in the final black, he is able (through his clever planning) to make one move again in the same way (like a knight) and be back at the opening red square again! Below is his completed scoreboard.

                            Find the opening red square and show the order in which Oliver recorded the squares.


                            Answers by private message initially please...
                            Attached Files
                            Last edited by davis_greatest; 12 January 2009, 11:54 PM.
                            "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                            David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                            Comment


                            • Addendum R. 361

                              after having enlisted the help of the world's packing-of-circles-in-square experts with all their computational power, we can now be confident that 316 balls or more indeed do not fit into a 17x17 box.
                              Here is the list I obtained (thanks to Dr. Eckard Specht), also whoever still interested look at his site and be amazed by the irregular arrangements of most packings and play around with their cool ball/box calculator
                              http://www.packomania.com/

                              N___radius (for box size of 1)___box size (for diameter of 1)
                              ----------------------------------------------------------------
                              310 0.029656532915.................16.859
                              311 0.029583286119.................16.901
                              312 0.029572068491.................16.908
                              313 0.029568593144.................16.910
                              314 0.029530610813.................16.932
                              315 0.029408808740.................17.002
                              316 0.029319864182.................17.053
                              317 0.029276000746.................17.079
                              318 0.029213599497.................17.115
                              319 0.029173220387.................17.139

                              slight aside, erm, actually, they don't even fit the obvious 315 balls inside the 17x17 box
                              But that just must be due to the fact that they approach the problem the other way around, i.e. find the smallest possible square box for a given number of balls or rather they calculate the radius of the given number of balls fitting into a unit box.

                              and last, but not least, Moglet improved on my wobbly row (involving the outside balls of the next row above the wobbles), as there was no way to fit the balls in the way I thought (deluded by silly paint).

                              ...and now I have to go find a life again
                              Last edited by snookersfun; 13 January 2009, 07:36 PM. Reason: number dyslectic

                              Comment


                              • Originally Posted by snookersfun View Post
                                N___radius (for box size of 1)___box size (for diameter of 1)
                                ----------------------------------------------------------------

                                314 0.029530610813.................16.932
                                315 0.029408808740.................17.002
                                Haha , why does he show 315 balls as not fitting in Charlie's 17x17 box? Doesn't his program work? :snooker:
                                "If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can."
                                David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.

                                Comment

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