paper bag problem

{{Short description|On volume enclosed by two rectangles}}

Image:Cushion.jpg

In geometry, the paper bag problem or teabag problem is to calculate the maximum possible inflated volume of an initially flat sealed rectangular bag which has the same shape as a cushion or pillow, made out of two pieces of material which can bend but not stretch.

According to Anthony C. Robin, an approximate formula for the capacity of a sealed expanded bag is:{{sfn|Robin|2004}}

:V=w^3 \left (h/ \left (\pi w \right ) -0.142 \left (1-10^ \left (-h/w \right ) \right ) \right ),

where w is the width of the bag (the shorter dimension), h is the height (the longer dimension), and V is the maximum volume. The approximation ignores the crimping round the equator of the bag.

A very rough approximation to the capacity of a bag that is open at one edge is:

:V=w^3 \left (h/ \left (\pi w \right ) -0.071 \left (1-10^ \left (-2h/w \right ) \right ) \right ){{Citation needed|date=June 2023}}

(This latter formula assumes that the corners at the bottom of the bag are linked by a single edge, and that the base of the bag is not a more complex shape such as a lens).{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}}

The square teabag

Image:teabag.jpg

For the special case where the bag is sealed on all edges and is square with unit sides, h = w = 1, the first formula estimates a volume of roughly

:V=\frac 1 {\pi} - 0.142 \cdot 0.9

or roughly 0.19. According to Andrew Kepert, a lecturer in mathematics at the University of Newcastle, Australia, an upper bound for this version of the teabag problem is 0.217+, and he has made a construction that appears to give a volume of 0.2055+.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}}

Robin also found a more complicated formula for the general paper bag,{{sfn|Robin|2004}}{{Specify|reason=What is the formula?|date=June 2023}} which gives 0.2017, below the bounds given by Kepert (i.e., 0.2055+ ≤ maximum volume ≤ 0.217+).

See also

Notes

{{reflist}}

References

  • {{cite journal|

last=Robin| first=Anthony C|

year=2004|

title=Paper Bag Problem|

journal=Mathematics Today|

publisher=Institute of Mathematics and its Applications|

issn=1361-2042 |

volume=June|

pages=104–107}}

  • {{cite web |author1=Weisstein, Eric W. |author1-link=Eric W. Weisstein |title=Paper Bag |url=https://mathworld.wolfram.com/PaperBag.html |website=MathWorld |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629050124/https://mathworld.wolfram.com/PaperBag.html |archive-date=2011-06-29 |url-status=dead}}{{Circular reference|date=June 2023}}