arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1411.6868 [math.CO]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Bisector energy and few distinct distances

Ben Lund, Adam Sheffer, Frank de Zeeuw

Published 2014-11-25Version 1

We introduce the bisector energy of an $n$-point set $P$ in $\mathbb{R}^2$, defined as the number of quadruples $(a,b,c,d)$ from $P$ such that $a$ and $b$ determine the same perpendicular bisector as $c$ and $d$. If no line or circle contains $M(n)$ points of $P$, then we prove that the bisector energy is $O(M(n)^{\frac{2}{5}}n^{\frac{12}{5}+\epsilon} + M(n)n^2).$. We also prove the lower bound $\Omega(M(n)n^2)$, which matches our upper bound when $M(n)$ is large. We use our upper bound on the bisector energy to obtain two rather different results: (i) If $P$ determines $O(n/\sqrt{\log n})$ distinct distances, then for any $0<\alpha\le 1/4$, either there exists a line or circle that contains $n^\alpha$ points of $P$, or there exist $\Omega(n^{8/5-12\alpha/5-\epsilon})$ distinct lines that contain $\Omega(\sqrt{\log n})$ points of $P$. This result provides new information on a conjecture of Erd\H{o}s regarding the structure of point sets with few distinct distances. (ii) If no line or circle contains $M(n)$ points of $P$, then the number of distinct perpendicular bisectors determined by $P$ is $\Omega(\min\{M(n)^{-2/5}n^{8/5-\epsilon}, M(n)^{-1} n^2\})$. This appears to be the first higher-dimensional example in a framework for studying the expansion properties of polynomials and rational functions over $\mathbb{R}$, initiated by Elekes and R\'onyai.

Comments: 18 pages, 2 figures
Categories: math.CO
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1812.03371 [math.CO] (Published 2018-12-08)
On Distinct Distances Between a Variety and a Point Set
arXiv:1404.3821 [math.CO] (Published 2014-04-15, updated 2015-03-18)
Some Bounds for the Number of Blocks III
arXiv:1111.5736 [math.CO] (Published 2011-11-24)
Upper bounds for the Stanley-Wilf limit of 1324 and other layered patterns