Sphere packing

Sphere packing finds practical application in the stacking of cannonballs.

In geometry, a sphere packing is an arrangement of non-overlapping spheres within a containing space. The spheres considered are usually all of identical size, and the space is usually three-dimensional Euclidean space. However, sphere packing problems can be generalised to consider unequal spheres, spaces of other dimensions (where the problem becomes circle packing in two dimensions, or hypersphere packing in higher dimensions) or to non-Euclidean spaces such as hyperbolic space.

A typical sphere packing problem is to find an arrangement in which the spheres fill as much of the space as possible. The proportion of space filled by the spheres is called the packing density of the arrangement. As the local density of a packing in an infinite space can vary depending on the volume over which it is measured, the problem is usually to maximise the average or asymptotic density, measured over a large enough volume.

For equal spheres in three dimensions, the densest packing uses approximately 74% of the volume. A random packing of equal spheres generally has a density around 63.5%.[1]

  1. ^ Wu, Yugong; Fan, Zhigang; Lu, Yuzhu (1 May 2003). "Bulk and interior packing densities of random close packing of hard spheres". Journal of Materials Science. 38 (9): 2019–2025. doi:10.1023/A:1023597707363. ISSN 1573-4803. S2CID 137583828.

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