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2025-08-25 23:26:05 UTC
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Greg Egan on Nostr: nprofile1q…ufa4k It turns out to be pretty straightforward to prove this in ...

It turns out to be pretty straightforward to prove this in general, without worrying about the specific geometry of the (d-1)-dimensional faces of each regular polytope in R^d.

The Jacobian that gives the 2d-volume of the space of pairs of points on every line segment joining two parallel, congruent (d-1)-dimensional faces factors into three pieces, that when integrated give a product that contains the square of the (d-1)-volume of the faces, the square of the orthogonal distance between them, and some factors that only depend on d. But the total volume of the polytope, squared — which is the total 2d-volume in the denominator when computing the probability — also contains the first two factors, along with a factor of F^2.

When we multiply by F/2 to account for all the different pairs of opposite faces, we are left with k_d / F, where k_d depends only on the dimension.