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The third of Hilbert's list of mathematical problems, presented in 1900, was the first to be solved. The problem is related to the following question: given any two polyhedra of equal volume, is it always possible to cut the first into finitely many polyhedral pieces which can be reassembled to yield the second? Based on earlier writings by
Carl Friedrich Gauss Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss (; german: Gauß ; la, Carolus Fridericus Gauss; 30 April 177723 February 1855) was a German mathematician and physicist who made significant contributions to many fields in mathematics and science. Sometimes refe ...
,
David Hilbert David Hilbert (; ; 23 January 1862 – 14 February 1943) was a German mathematician, one of the most influential mathematicians of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Hilbert discovered and developed a broad range of fundamental ideas in many ...
conjectured that this is not always possible. This was confirmed within the year by his student Max Dehn, who proved that the answer in general is "no" by producing a counterexample. The answer for the analogous question about polygons in 2 dimensions is "yes" and had been known for a long time; this is the
Wallace–Bolyai–Gerwien theorem In geometry, the Wallace–Bolyai–Gerwien theorem, named after William Wallace, Farkas Bolyai and Paul Gerwien, is a theorem related to dissections of polygons. It answers the question when one polygon can be formed from another by cutting ...
. Unknown to Hilbert and Dehn, Hilbert's third problem was also proposed independently by Władysław Kretkowski for a math contest of 1882 by the Academy of Arts and Sciences of
Kraków Kraków (), or Cracow, is the second-largest and one of the oldest cities in Poland. Situated on the Vistula River in Lesser Poland Voivodeship, the city dates back to the seventh century. Kraków was the official capital of Poland until 159 ...
, and was solved by Ludwik Antoni Birkenmajer with a different method than Dehn. Birkenmajer did not publish the result, and the original manuscript containing his solution was rediscovered years later.


History and motivation

The formula for the volume of a pyramid, :\frac, had been known to Euclid, but all proofs of it involve some form of limiting process or calculus, notably the method of exhaustion or, in more modern form,
Cavalieri's principle In geometry, Cavalieri's principle, a modern implementation of the method of indivisibles, named after Bonaventura Cavalieri, is as follows: * 2-dimensional case: Suppose two regions in a plane are included between two parallel lines in that pl ...
. Similar formulas in plane geometry can be proven with more elementary means. Gauss regretted this defect in two of his letters to Christian Ludwig Gerling, who proved that two symmetric tetrahedra are equidecomposable. Gauss' letters were the motivation for Hilbert: is it possible to prove the equality of volume using elementary "cut-and-glue" methods? Because if not, then an elementary proof of Euclid's result is also impossible.


Dehn's answer

Dehn's proof is an instance in which
abstract algebra In mathematics, more specifically algebra, abstract algebra or modern algebra is the study of algebraic structures. Algebraic structures include groups, rings, fields, modules, vector spaces, lattices, and algebras over a field. The te ...
is used to prove an impossibility result in geometry. Other examples are doubling the cube and trisecting the angle. Two polyhedra are called scissors-congruent if the first can be cut into finitely many polyhedral pieces that can be reassembled to yield the second. Any two scissors-congruent polyhedra have the same volume. Hilbert asks about the converse. For every polyhedron P, Dehn defines a value, now known as the Dehn invariant \operatorname(P), with the property that, if P is cut into polyhedral pieces P_1, P_2, \dots P_n, then \operatorname(P) = \operatorname(P_1)+\operatorname(P_2)+\cdots + \operatorname(P_n). In particular, if two polyhedra are scissors-congruent, then they have the same Dehn invariant. He then shows that every
cube In geometry, a cube is a three-dimensional solid object bounded by six square faces, facets or sides, with three meeting at each vertex. Viewed from a corner it is a hexagon and its net is usually depicted as a cross. The cube is the only r ...
has Dehn invariant zero while every regular tetrahedron has non-zero Dehn invariant. Therefore, these two shapes cannot be scissors-congruent. A polyhedron's invariant is defined based on the lengths of its edges and the angles between its faces. If a polyhedron is cut into two, some edges are cut into two, and the corresponding contributions to the Dehn invariants should therefore be additive in the edge lengths. Similarly, if a polyhedron is cut along an edge, the corresponding angle is cut into two. Cutting a polyhedron typically also introduces new edges and angles; their contributions must cancel out. The angles introduced when a cut passes through a face add to \pi, and the angles introduced around an edge interior to the polyhedron add to 2\pi. Therefore, the Dehn invariant is defined in such a way that integer multiples of angles of \pi give a net contribution of zero. All of the above requirements can be met by defining \operatorname(P) as an element of the tensor product of the real numbers \R (representing lengths of edges) and the
quotient space Quotient space may refer to a quotient set when the sets under consideration are considered as spaces. In particular: *Quotient space (topology), in case of topological spaces * Quotient space (linear algebra), in case of vector spaces *Quotient ...
\R/(\Q\pi) (representing angles, with all rational multiples of \pi replaced by zero). For some purposes, this definition can be made using the tensor product of modules over \Z (or equivalently of abelian groups), while other aspects of this topic make use of a vector space structure on the invariants, obtained by considering the two factors \R and \R/(\Q\pi) to be vector spaces over \Q and taking the tensor product of vector spaces over \Q. This choice of structure in the definition does not make a difference in whether two Dehn invariants, defined in either way, are equal or unequal. For any edge e of a polyhedron P, let \ell(e) be its length and let \theta(e) denote the dihedral angle of the two faces of P that meet at e, measured in radians and considered modulo rational multiples of \pi. The Dehn invariant is then defined as \operatorname(P) = \sum_ \ell(e)\otimes \theta(e) where the sum is taken over all edges e of the polyhedron P. It is a valuation.


Further information

In light of Dehn's theorem above, one might ask "which polyhedra are scissors-congruent"? Sydler (1965) showed that two polyhedra are scissors-congruent if and only if they have the same volume and the same Dehn invariant. Børge Jessen later extended Sydler's results to four dimensions. In 1990, Dupont and Sah provided a simpler proof of Sydler's result by reinterpreting it as a theorem about the homology of certain classical groups. Debrunner showed in 1980 that the Dehn invariant of any polyhedron with which all of three-dimensional space can be tiled periodically is zero. Jessen also posed the question of whether the analogue of Jessen's results remained true for
spherical geometry 300px, A sphere with a spherical triangle on it. Spherical geometry is the geometry of the two-dimensional surface of a sphere. In this context the word "sphere" refers only to the 2-dimensional surface and other terms like "ball" or "solid sp ...
and hyperbolic geometry. In these geometries, Dehn's method continues to work, and shows that when two polyhedra are scissors-congruent, their Dehn invariants are equal. However, it remains an
open problem In science and mathematics, an open problem or an open question is a known problem which can be accurately stated, and which is assumed to have an objective and verifiable solution, but which has not yet been solved (i.e., no solution for it is know ...
whether pairs of polyhedra with the same volume and the same Dehn invariant, in these geometries, are always scissors-congruent..


Original question

Hilbert's original question was more complicated: given any two tetrahedra ''T''1 and ''T''2 with equal base area and equal height (and therefore equal volume), is it always possible to find a finite number of tetrahedra, so that when these tetrahedra are glued in some way to ''T''1 and also glued to ''T''2, the resulting polyhedra are scissors-congruent? Dehn's invariant can be used to yield a negative answer also to this stronger question.


See also

* Hill tetrahedron * Onorato Nicoletti


References


Further reading

* * *


External links


Proof of Dehn's Theorem at Everything2
*
Dehn Invariant at Everything2
* {{Authority control #03 Euclidean solid geometry Geometric dissection