Mark Thompson
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 Triamond Dissection
Picture

The figure shown is a triamond, a figure formed by joining three equilateral triangles at the edges (named on analogy with a diamond, which is formed by joining two such triangles).  A triamond is therefore an isosceles trapezoid with base angles of 60.

If a triamond has sides whose lengths are integers, it may be possible to cut it into smaller triamonds which also have integral sides.  The puzzle this month is to take a triamond whose shortest sides are 11 units and dissect it into the smallest possible number of smaller triamonds. The smaller triamonds will be of assorted sizes -- not all the same size, nor all different.  You could print out the image above to experiment upon, or you could use isometric-orthographic graph paper (marked in a triangular grid).

I’ve seen the analogous puzzle about dissecting squares posted on a CompuServe forum, but I don’t know where it originated.  I don’t know whether anyone else has tried dissecting a triamond into a minimal number of similar shapes, but so many problems of combinatorial geometry have occupied researchers that I wouldn’t be surprised.  (Erich Friedmann, for instance, has a good webpage on combinatorial geometry.)

Click here for the solution.

Questions, corrections, comments:  Send me e-mail at  markthom@flash.net

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