Ellipsoid Packing
Bezdek and Kuperberg (1991) have constructed packings of identical ellipsoids of densities arbitrarily close to
(OEIS A093824), greater than the maximum density of pi/(3sqrt(2)) approx 0.74048 (OEIS A093825) that is possible for sphere packing (Sloane 1998), as established by proof of the Kepler conjecture. Furthermore, J. Wills has modified the ellipsoid packing to yield an even higher density of 0.7585... (Bezdek and Kuperberg 1991).
Donev et al. (2004) showed that a maximally random jammed state of M&Ms chocolate candies has a packing density of about 68%, or 4% greater than spheres. Furthermore, Donev et al. (2004) also showed by computer simulations other ellipsoid packings resulted in random packing densities approaching that of the densest sphere packings, i.e., filling nearly 74% of space.
See also
Ellipsoid, Kepler Conjecture, Random Close Packing, Sphere PackingExplore with Wolfram|Alpha
References
Bezdek, A. and Kuperberg, W. In Applied Geometry and Discrete Mathematics: The Victor Klee Festschrift (Ed. P. Gritzmann and B. Sturmfels). Providence, RI: Amer. Math. Soc., pp. 71-80, 1991.Donev, A.; Cisse, I.; Sachs, D.; Variano, E. A.; Stillinger, F. H.; Connelly, R.; Torquato, S.; and Chaikin, P. M. "Improving the Density of Jammed Disordered Packings using Ellipsoids." Science, 303, 990-993, 2004.Sloane, N. J. A. "Kepler's Conjecture Confirmed." Nature 395, 435-436, 1998.Sloane, N. J. A. Sequences A093824 and A093825 in "The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences."Referenced on Wolfram|Alpha
Ellipsoid PackingCite this as:
Weisstein, Eric W. "Ellipsoid Packing." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Resource. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/EllipsoidPacking.html