Tiling Rectangles and the Plane Using Squares of Integral Sides †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What subsets of the natural numbers (for the length of the squares) can be used to tile the plane?
- Can the half-plane and half-space be tiled with unequal squares and cubes, respectively?
- Is it possible to partition the set of natural numbers into two subsets, so that one subset is able to tile the plane and the other is not?
- Can infinite three-dimensional space be tiled with unequal cubes?
2. Tiling the Plane
2.1. A Subset of Even Numbers and One Odd Number
2.2. A Subset of Even Numbers and Three Odds
3. Possibility of Tiling a Rectangle
3.1. A Subset of Even Numbers by Considering One, Two, or Three Odd Numbers
- All three squares are in the same direction: In this case, it is impossible to tile any rectangular area again. If all three odd squares are adjacent, the other squares will be all even, so the length of the rectangle and therefore the length of will be odd, which shows it cannot be tiled with even numbers (see Figure 7).
- No two squares with odd length are in the same direction, and the length of the rectangular area is greater than the sum of three squares: In this case, the dashed area will be preserved (see Figure 8). It is proved that it cannot be covered with the remaining squares, which are all even. Since there exist only three odd squares, while the rectangular area is odd, the length or width of the rectangle will necessarily be odd. Thus, the marked area cannot be covered with even tiles.
- No two odd squares are in the same direction and the length of the rectangular area is equal to the sum of three squares: In this case, the rectangular area becomes a square whose length is equal to the sum of three odd square’s edges (see Figure 9). As mentioned earlier, the total area is odd and thus both edges of the rectangle (here square) will be odd. It is clear that the marked areas in Figure 9 cannot be tiled with even squares, because the length or width of the marked area will be odd (equal to the length of its adjacent tile).
- One of the odd squares completely tiles one corner of the rectangle (Figure 10): In this case, a surface with length X and width b will remain such that, according to the problem’s assumption, the length of X is odd, and according to Lemma 5, it cannot be covered by a set that includes two odd numbers.
3.2. A Subset of Even Numbers and Odd Numbers
- is odd: Exactly one of R and L is odd. In this case, it is enough to add to set A (according to the Fibonacci sequence), and so the new set has one more odd number and can tile some rectangles.
- is even: Both R and L are odd. In this case, by adding to the set, the number of odd numbers does not increase and should be added to the sequence which is a new odd.
4. Conclusions and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Sadeghi Bigham, B.; Davoodi Monfared, M.; Mazaheri, S.; Kheyrabadi, J. Tiling Rectangles and the Plane Using Squares of Integral Sides. Mathematics 2024, 12, 1027. https://doi.org/10.3390/math12071027
Sadeghi Bigham B, Davoodi Monfared M, Mazaheri S, Kheyrabadi J. Tiling Rectangles and the Plane Using Squares of Integral Sides. Mathematics. 2024; 12(7):1027. https://doi.org/10.3390/math12071027
Chicago/Turabian StyleSadeghi Bigham, Bahram, Mansoor Davoodi Monfared, Samaneh Mazaheri, and Jalal Kheyrabadi. 2024. "Tiling Rectangles and the Plane Using Squares of Integral Sides" Mathematics 12, no. 7: 1027. https://doi.org/10.3390/math12071027
APA StyleSadeghi Bigham, B., Davoodi Monfared, M., Mazaheri, S., & Kheyrabadi, J. (2024). Tiling Rectangles and the Plane Using Squares of Integral Sides. Mathematics, 12(7), 1027. https://doi.org/10.3390/math12071027