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A057785 Blunt polypons (no 30 deg. angles) with n cells. +0
2
0, 1, 2, 1, 1, 4, 4, 10, 13, 31, 43, 102 (list; graph; listen)
OFFSET

1,3

COMMENT

It would be nice to have a definition of "polypon"! - N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com), May 09 2007

Comments from R. J. Mathar, Dec 10 2007: (Start)

By looking at the Clarke pictures, I guess that the unit element is a triangle with

internal angles of 120 degrees and two of 30 degrees. The polypons are

connected, nonoverlapping assemblies of these, where connectivity is defined

via common sides; a common point is not enough. Only non-congruential

assemblies are counted, those which cannot be mapped onto each other by

rotations, translations or mirrors along a line or point. However, the

polypons are not all of these, because some of the free-form assemblies of

this kind would need placement of the unit that violates the format by the

grid. (The first case where this happens is with assemblies of 3 units: the

picture shows 2 examples with assemblies of 3 units, but I can imagine at

least 1 more where the unit would need to hide/cover one of the grid's edges.) (End)

REFERENCES

Computed by Brendan Owen.

LINKS

Andrew Clarke, Other Polyforms

CROSSREFS

Cf. A057786.

Sequence in context: A122518 A129704 A144460 this_sequence A158471 A158472 A118686

Adjacent sequences: A057782 A057783 A057784 this_sequence A057786 A057787 A057788

KEYWORD

nonn,nice

AUTHOR

N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com), Nov 04 2000

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Last modified December 8 08:31 EST 2009. Contains 170430 sequences.


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