You picked a good sampling theta, but how are you going to decompose Dini?

silhouette photography of jump shot of two persons

Seems like a solid choice, Sarah doesn’t even question your pick and moves on. “Right so, next we have to partition our Dini orbits by our group H so that we can get two points both of which will belong to the same orbit once rotated. You’re still following all of this right?”

You rub your eyes like you fell asleep to some lecture and woke up in the middle of the test. Where did all of these definitions come from, now you have to write something on the board, this feels like a critical step, what does she mean H, and where are all these M’s from. You’re too embarrassed to ask and figure out what means what.

“This is a pretty important step; we need enough pieces of our S^2 unit sphere that we can piece them together twice!”

What paradoxical decomposition do you go with?

A1=S(a)M, A2=S(b^−1)MUM\B , A3=S(a^−1)M, A4=S(b)BUMUB

A1=S(b^−1)M\B, A2=S(a)MUMUB, A3=S(b)B, A4=S(a^−1)M

A1=S(a^−1)BUM, A2=S(b^−1)M\B, A3=S(a)MUMUB, A4=S(b)M

A1 = S(a)M U M UB, A2 = S(a^-1)M\B, A3 = S(b)M, A4=S(b^-1)M        

Published by B McGraw

B McGraw has lived a long and successful professional life as a software developer and researcher. After completing his BS in spaghetti coding at the department of the dark arts at Cranberry Lemon in 2005 he wasted no time in getting a masters in debugging by print statement in 2008 and obtaining his PhD with research in screwing up repos on Github in 2014. That's when he could finally get paid. In 2018 B McGraw finally made the big step of defaulting on his student loans and began advancing his career by adding his name on other people's research papers after finding one grammatical mistake in the Peer Review process.

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