Distinct Angles and Angle Chains in Three Dimensions
Ruben Ascoli, Livia Betti, Jacob Lehmann Duke, Xuyan Liu, Wyatt, Milgrim, Steven J. Miller, Eyvindur A. Palsson, Francisco Romero Acosta,, Santiago Velazquez Iannuzzelli

TL;DR
This paper investigates the minimum number of distinct angles and angle chains in three-dimensional point configurations, extending the planar angle problem into higher dimensions and exploring explicit constructions and bounds.
Contribution
It introduces bounds for the minimum number of distinct angles in three dimensions and studies angle chains, using self-similar configurations and extending previous planar results.
Findings
Established bounds on distinct angles in D
Analyzed explicit self-similar point configurations
Provided bounds on distinct angle chains in D and D
Abstract
In 1946, Erd\H{o}s posed the distinct distance problem, which seeks to find the minimum number of distinct distances between pairs of points selected from any configuration of points in the plane. The problem has since been explored along with many variants, including ones that extend it into higher dimensions. Less studied but no less intriguing is Erd\H{o}s' distinct angle problem, which seeks to find point configurations in the plane that minimize the number of distinct angles. In their recent paper "Distinct Angles in General Position," Fleischmann, Konyagin, Miller, Palsson, Pesikoff, and Wolf use a logarithmic spiral to establish an upper bound of on the minimum number of distinct angles in the plane in general position, which prohibits three points on any line or four on any circle. We consider the question of distinct angles in three dimensions and provide bounds…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Geometry and Mesh Generation · Point processes and geometric inequalities · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs
