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:

V = w 3 ( h / ( π w ) 0.142 ( 1 10 ( h / w ) ) ) , {\displaystyle 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 ( h / ( π w ) 0.071 ( 1 10 ( 2 h / w ) ) ) {\displaystyle V=w^{3}\left(h/\left(\pi w\right)-0.071\left(1-10^{\left(-2h/w\right)}\right)\right)}

(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).

The square teabag

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 = 1 π 0.142 0.9 {\displaystyle 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 .

Robin also found a more complicated formula for the general paper bag, which gives 0.2017, below the bounds given by Kepert (i.e., 0.2055 ≤ maximum volume ≤ 0.217 ).

See also

  • Biscornu, a shape formed by attaching two squares in a different way, with the corner of one at the midpoint of the other
  • Mylar balloon (geometry)

Notes

References

  • Robin, Anthony C (2004). "Paper Bag Problem". Mathematics Today. June. Institute of Mathematics and its Applications: 104–107. ISSN 1361-2042.
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Paper Bag". MathWorld. Archived from the original on 2011-06-29.

External links

  • The original statement of the teabag problem
  • Andrew Kepert's work on the teabag problem (mirror)
  • Curved folds for the teabag problem
  • A numerical approach to the teabag problem by Andreas Gammel
  • Weisstein, Eric W. "Paper Bag Surface". MathWorld.

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