Dividing a closed connected region into multiple subregions












1












$begingroup$


Suppose I have a closed connected bounded region $A$ in $R^2$ (I am not that familiar with definitions in topology, so I just use the word "region" to mean the obvious one). It's probably called a closed connected bounded set in $R^2$, is it not?



If I want to partition $A$ into $n+1$ subregions with equal area using $n$ vertical lines, where $n$ is even, how do I do that?



I mean, I am sure it can be done, but I'd like to find these exact lines. My first guess is I have to find the parametrization $(x(t),y(t))$ of the boundary, but I don't know where to go next, but my next guess is to use the concept of line integral.



I assume even $n$ since I guess it is a bit more complicated than the odd ones. Just maybe..



*feel free to change the tags










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$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    You should add some more details: do you know an equation for the boundary in the form $y=f(x)$, with $f$ regular enough? is the region convex? do you need an exact result, or just a numeric approximation? A realistic example would also be of help.
    $endgroup$
    – Aretino
    Jan 2 at 16:04










  • $begingroup$
    @Aretino I did not know anything about convex until you mentioned it and went on to read what it is. The region need not be convex: two arbitrary points in it are connected by a curve (not necessarily straight line) in it. If the region is closed (like a disk for example), I thought the general equation needs parametrization, not just y = f(x)? I think we can assume that the parametrization is known.
    $endgroup$
    – bms
    Jan 3 at 0:09
















1












$begingroup$


Suppose I have a closed connected bounded region $A$ in $R^2$ (I am not that familiar with definitions in topology, so I just use the word "region" to mean the obvious one). It's probably called a closed connected bounded set in $R^2$, is it not?



If I want to partition $A$ into $n+1$ subregions with equal area using $n$ vertical lines, where $n$ is even, how do I do that?



I mean, I am sure it can be done, but I'd like to find these exact lines. My first guess is I have to find the parametrization $(x(t),y(t))$ of the boundary, but I don't know where to go next, but my next guess is to use the concept of line integral.



I assume even $n$ since I guess it is a bit more complicated than the odd ones. Just maybe..



*feel free to change the tags










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    You should add some more details: do you know an equation for the boundary in the form $y=f(x)$, with $f$ regular enough? is the region convex? do you need an exact result, or just a numeric approximation? A realistic example would also be of help.
    $endgroup$
    – Aretino
    Jan 2 at 16:04










  • $begingroup$
    @Aretino I did not know anything about convex until you mentioned it and went on to read what it is. The region need not be convex: two arbitrary points in it are connected by a curve (not necessarily straight line) in it. If the region is closed (like a disk for example), I thought the general equation needs parametrization, not just y = f(x)? I think we can assume that the parametrization is known.
    $endgroup$
    – bms
    Jan 3 at 0:09














1












1








1


1



$begingroup$


Suppose I have a closed connected bounded region $A$ in $R^2$ (I am not that familiar with definitions in topology, so I just use the word "region" to mean the obvious one). It's probably called a closed connected bounded set in $R^2$, is it not?



If I want to partition $A$ into $n+1$ subregions with equal area using $n$ vertical lines, where $n$ is even, how do I do that?



I mean, I am sure it can be done, but I'd like to find these exact lines. My first guess is I have to find the parametrization $(x(t),y(t))$ of the boundary, but I don't know where to go next, but my next guess is to use the concept of line integral.



I assume even $n$ since I guess it is a bit more complicated than the odd ones. Just maybe..



*feel free to change the tags










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$




Suppose I have a closed connected bounded region $A$ in $R^2$ (I am not that familiar with definitions in topology, so I just use the word "region" to mean the obvious one). It's probably called a closed connected bounded set in $R^2$, is it not?



If I want to partition $A$ into $n+1$ subregions with equal area using $n$ vertical lines, where $n$ is even, how do I do that?



I mean, I am sure it can be done, but I'd like to find these exact lines. My first guess is I have to find the parametrization $(x(t),y(t))$ of the boundary, but I don't know where to go next, but my next guess is to use the concept of line integral.



I assume even $n$ since I guess it is a bit more complicated than the odd ones. Just maybe..



*feel free to change the tags







multivariable-calculus analytic-geometry






share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question











share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question










asked Jan 2 at 14:31









bmsbms

335




335












  • $begingroup$
    You should add some more details: do you know an equation for the boundary in the form $y=f(x)$, with $f$ regular enough? is the region convex? do you need an exact result, or just a numeric approximation? A realistic example would also be of help.
    $endgroup$
    – Aretino
    Jan 2 at 16:04










  • $begingroup$
    @Aretino I did not know anything about convex until you mentioned it and went on to read what it is. The region need not be convex: two arbitrary points in it are connected by a curve (not necessarily straight line) in it. If the region is closed (like a disk for example), I thought the general equation needs parametrization, not just y = f(x)? I think we can assume that the parametrization is known.
    $endgroup$
    – bms
    Jan 3 at 0:09


















  • $begingroup$
    You should add some more details: do you know an equation for the boundary in the form $y=f(x)$, with $f$ regular enough? is the region convex? do you need an exact result, or just a numeric approximation? A realistic example would also be of help.
    $endgroup$
    – Aretino
    Jan 2 at 16:04










  • $begingroup$
    @Aretino I did not know anything about convex until you mentioned it and went on to read what it is. The region need not be convex: two arbitrary points in it are connected by a curve (not necessarily straight line) in it. If the region is closed (like a disk for example), I thought the general equation needs parametrization, not just y = f(x)? I think we can assume that the parametrization is known.
    $endgroup$
    – bms
    Jan 3 at 0:09
















$begingroup$
You should add some more details: do you know an equation for the boundary in the form $y=f(x)$, with $f$ regular enough? is the region convex? do you need an exact result, or just a numeric approximation? A realistic example would also be of help.
$endgroup$
– Aretino
Jan 2 at 16:04




$begingroup$
You should add some more details: do you know an equation for the boundary in the form $y=f(x)$, with $f$ regular enough? is the region convex? do you need an exact result, or just a numeric approximation? A realistic example would also be of help.
$endgroup$
– Aretino
Jan 2 at 16:04












$begingroup$
@Aretino I did not know anything about convex until you mentioned it and went on to read what it is. The region need not be convex: two arbitrary points in it are connected by a curve (not necessarily straight line) in it. If the region is closed (like a disk for example), I thought the general equation needs parametrization, not just y = f(x)? I think we can assume that the parametrization is known.
$endgroup$
– bms
Jan 3 at 0:09




$begingroup$
@Aretino I did not know anything about convex until you mentioned it and went on to read what it is. The region need not be convex: two arbitrary points in it are connected by a curve (not necessarily straight line) in it. If the region is closed (like a disk for example), I thought the general equation needs parametrization, not just y = f(x)? I think we can assume that the parametrization is known.
$endgroup$
– bms
Jan 3 at 0:09










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