Amicable Lattice Rhombuses are Amicable
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 03:00 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Amicable lattice rhombuses must be equable.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We show that amicable lattice rhombuses are actually equable. For lattice rhombuses satisfying the amicable conditions, where the area of the first equals the perimeter of the second and conversely, the proof demonstrates that each must satisfy area equals perimeter individually.
What carries the argument
Amicable condition applied to lattice rhombuses with integer lattice vertices, which enforces self-equality through geometric and integrality properties.
If this is right
- If true, amicable pairs of lattice rhombuses cannot exist unless they are equable.
- The search for such pairs simplifies to enumerating equable lattice rhombuses.
- Any potential amicable lattice rhombus pair must have equal areas and perimeters for both members.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This could extend to other types of lattice polygons, suggesting a general pattern for amicable pairs.
- Researchers might use this to develop algorithms for finding equable lattice rhombuses more efficiently.
- The result highlights how lattice points restrict possible area-perimeter relations in polygons.
Load-bearing premise
The rhombuses are formed with vertices at integer lattice points and obey the amicable area and perimeter swap without prior equality.
What would settle it
Discovery of two distinct lattice rhombuses where the area of one equals the perimeter of the other but neither has area equal to its own perimeter would falsify the claim.
Figures
read the original abstract
A polygon is equable if its area is equal to its perimeter. A pair of polygons is an amicable pair if the area of the first is equal to the perimeter of the second, and vice versa. A polygon is a lattice polygon if its vertices lie on the integer lattice. We show that amicable lattice rhombuses are actually equable.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proves that any amicable pair of lattice rhombuses must in fact be equable (area equals perimeter). Lattice rhombuses have vertices at integer coordinates; amicability requires that the area of the first equals the perimeter of the second and vice versa. The argument parameterizes each rhombus by side length s and angle whose sine satisfies sin θ = 4/s (arising from the area-perimeter interchange), deduces that √(s² − 16) must be integer, solves the resulting Diophantine equation s² − t² = 16 for integer s ≥ 4, obtains only the solutions s = 4 and s = 5, and verifies that both cases are equable and satisfy the lattice and area-bound conditions.
Significance. The result supplies a clean classification: within the class of lattice rhombuses, amicability forces equability. The proof rests on elementary integrality and Diophantine constraints rather than heavy machinery, which is a positive feature for a short note in discrete geometry. It may serve as a model for analogous statements about other restricted families of lattice polygons.
minor comments (2)
- The title uses “amicable” in two senses; a brief clarifying sentence in the introduction would prevent any initial confusion with the equable conclusion.
- Explicitly state the determinant (or area) formula used for a lattice rhombus early in the proof section so that the origin of the factor 4 is immediate.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the manuscript, the clear summary of our main result, and the recommendation to accept. No major comments were raised in the report.
Circularity Check
Derivation is self-contained with no circular steps
full rationale
The paper proves amicable lattice rhombuses are equable by deriving integer side-length constraints from the area-perimeter swap conditions, then solving the resulting Diophantine equations (via sin theta = 4/s and factoring s^2 - t^2 = 16) to enumerate only the cases s=4 and s=5. These cases are shown to satisfy the equable property directly from the lattice and rhombus geometry, without any self-definitional loops, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations. The argument relies solely on external number-theoretic facts and the stated integrality assumptions.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math A lattice polygon has all vertices at integer coordinates.
- standard math A rhombus has four equal side lengths.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
C. Aebi and G. Cairns, Lattice equable quadrilaterals I: Parallelograms,En- seign. Math.67(2021), 369–401
work page 2021
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[2]
I. Praton and N. Shalqini, Amicable Heronian triangles,Fibonacci Quart. 59, no. 4 (2021), 362–364
work page 2021
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[3]
I. Praton and W . Zeng, Amicable Rectangles on the Integer Lattice, to ap- pear,Pi Mu Epsilon Journal
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[4]
Yiu, Heronian triangles are lattice triangles,Amer
P . Yiu, Heronian triangles are lattice triangles,Amer . Math. Monthly109 (2001), no. 3, 261–263. FRANKLIN& MARSHALLCOLLEGE ipraton@fandm.edu 11
work page 2001
discussion (0)
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