Uniform distribution and geometric incidence theory
A. Gafni, A. Iosevich, and E. Wyman

TL;DR
This paper investigates the unit distance problem in Euclidean spaces, focusing on uniformly distributed point sets, and establishes new incidence bounds that connect combinatorial geometry with continuous distance conjectures.
Contribution
It introduces incidence bounds for uniformly distributed point sets, providing new insights into the unit distance problem in higher dimensions under structural assumptions.
Findings
Established new incidence bounds for uniformly distributed sets
Connected discrete unit distance problem with Falconer distance conjecture
Clarified properties of uniformly distributed sequences in geometric incidences
Abstract
A celebrated unit distance conjecture due to Erd\H os says that that the unit distances cannot arise more than times (for any ) among points in the Euclidean plane (see e.g. \cite{SST84} and the references contained therein). In three dimensions, the conjectured bound is (see e.g. \cite{KMSS12} and \cite{Z19}). In dimensions four and higher, this problem, in its general formulation, loses meaning because the Lens example shows that one can construct a set of points in dimension and higher where the unit distance arises times (see e.g. \cite{B97}). However, the Lens example is one-dimension in nature, which raises the possibility that the unit distance conjecture is still quite interesting in higher dimensions under additional structural assumptions on the point set. This point of view was explored in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLimits and Structures in Graph Theory · Computational Geometry and Mesh Generation · Point processes and geometric inequalities
