Hermite constant

Constant relating to close packing of spheres From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, the Hermite constant, named after Charles Hermite, determines how long a shortest element of a lattice in Euclidean space can be.

A hexagonal lattice with unit covolume (the area of the quadrilateral is 1). Both arrows are minimum non-zero elements for with length .

The constant for integers is defined as follows. For a lattice in Euclidean space with unit covolume, i.e. , let denote the least length of a nonzero element of . Then is the maximum of over all such lattices .

The square root in the definition of the Hermite constant is a matter of historical convention.

Alternatively, the Hermite constant can be defined as the square of the maximal systole of a flat -dimensional torus of unit volume.

Examples

The Hermite constant is known in dimensions 1–8 and 24.

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For , one has . This value is attained by the hexagonal lattice of the Eisenstein integers, scaled to have a fundamental parallelogram with unit area.[1]

Estimates

It is known that[2]

A stronger estimate due to Hans Frederick Blichfeldt[3] is[4]

where is the gamma function.

See also

References

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