In discrete geometry, an isosceles set is a set of points with the property that every three of them form an isosceles triangle. More precisely, each three points should determine at most two distances; this also allows degenerate isosceles triangles formed by three equally-spaced points on a line.
The problem of finding the largest isosceles set in a Euclidean space of a given dimension was posed in 1946 by Paul Erdős. In his statement of the problem, Erdős observed that the largest such set in the Euclidean plane has six points. In his 1947 solution, Leroy Milton Kelly showed more strongly that the unique six-point planar isosceles set consists of the vertices and center of a regular pentagon. In three dimensions, Kelly found an eight-point isosceles set, six points of which are the same; the remaining two points lie on a line perpendicular to the pentagon through its center, at the same distance as the pentagon vertices from the center. This three-dimensional example was later proven to be optimal, and to be the unique optimal solution.
Kelly's eight-point three-dimensional isosceles set can be decomposed into two sets
X
Y
X
Y
X
Y
X
Y'
Y
Despite this decomposition theorem, it is possible for the largest two-distance set and the largest isosceles set in the same dimension to have different sizes. This happens, for instance, in the plane, where the largest two-distance set has five points (the vertices of a regular pentagon), while the largest isosceles set has six points. In this case, the six-point isosceles set has a decomposition where
X
Y
In
d
d=6
d=8
d
d=1,2,...,8
3, 6, 8, 11, 17, 28, 30, 45 but these numbers are not known for higher dimensions.
Lisoněk provides the following construction of two-distance sets withpoints, which also produces isosceles sets withpoints. In
d+1
ei
i=1,...,d+1
i
S
ei+ej
i\nej
S
d
2
\Deltad+1,2
\sqrt2
2
S
d=3
The same problem can also be considered for other metric spaces. For instance, for Hamming spaces, somewhat smaller upper bounds are known than for Euclidean spaces of the same dimension. In an ultrametric space, the whole space (and any of its subsets) is an isosceles set. Therefore, ultrametric spaces are sometimes called isosceles spaces. However, not every isosceles set is ultrametric; for instance, obtuse Euclidean isosceles triangles are not ultrametric.