My previous puzzle asked for the maximum number of 4-point circles attainable from a configuration of $n=10$ points drawn on a plane. I am now interested in generalizations of this puzzle to arbitrary $n$.
I wrote a hill-climbing program that searches for configurations with integer coordinates. Here are the best solutions it has found so far:
$n=8$, 12 circles: (2,16) (10,20) (7,26) (12,6) (7,16) (12,11) (22,11) (16,14)
$n=9$, 14 circles: (9,17) (8,18) (5,17) (6,16) (7,19) (7,15) (6,18) (7,17) (8,16)
$n=11$, 30 circles: (5,27) (41,29) (29,37) (44,40) (35,33) (19,35) (35,7) (23,28) (35,37) (30,32) (17,19)
$n=12$, 43 circles: (27,7) (33,5) (37,17) (27,47) (21,5) (32,7) (12,17) (27,22) (42,17) (27,2) (17,17) (22,7)
Here are the questions I want answered:
- Can you improve any of these solutions? You can use either integer or non-integer coordinates.
- Can we construct any upper/lower bounds on the maximum number of circles possible for an arbitrary $n$?
- The solutions for $n$=8, 10 and 12 use two concentric polygons. Can we conjecture that for even $n \geq 8$ the best solution will use two concentric $(n/2)$-polygons?
- For $n=13$ my best solution uses 43 circles, which is exactly like the $n=12$ case. Surely that extra point must be useful for a few more circles?