• Kogasa
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      11 month ago

      Good point. Four equal angles, then, although they will each have to be greater than 90 degrees.

      • @delirious_owl
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        1 month ago

        I don’t think that would work for just 4 lines? I think you have to have arcs, not straight lines

        • Kogasa
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          31 month ago

          It’s possible to have an equiangular quadrilateral, i.e. whose sides are geodesics (the analogue of “straight line” on a sphere). The Gauss-Bonnet theorem implies their total interior angle is greater than 2pi, so four right angles can’t work.

          Here’s an interactive demo of quadrilaterals on the sphere: https://geogebra.org/m/q83rUj8r

          Notice that each side is a segment of a great circle, i.e. a circle that divides the sphere in half. That’s what it means for a path to be a geodesic on the sphere.