A central problem in discrete geometry, known as Hadwiger's covering problem,
asks what the smallest natural number N(n) is such that every
convex body in Rn can be covered by a union of the interiors of
at most N(n) of its translates. Despite continuous efforts, the
best general upper bound known for this number remains as it was more than
sixty years ago, of the order of (n2n)nlnn.
In this note, we improve this bound by a sub-exponential factor. That is, we
prove a bound of the order of (n2n)e−cn for some universal
constant c>0.
Our approach combines ideas from previous work by Artstein-Avidan and the
second named author with tools from Asymptotic Geometric Analysis. One of the
key steps is proving a new lower bound for the maximum volume of the
intersection of a convex body K with a translate of −K; in fact, we get the
same lower bound for the volume of the intersection of K and −K when they
both have barycenter at the origin. To do so, we make use of measure
concentration, and in particular of thin-shell estimates for isotropic
log-concave measures.
Using the same ideas, we establish an exponentially better bound for
N(n) when restricting our attention to convex bodies that are
ψ2. By a slightly different approach, an exponential improvement is
established also for classes of convex bodies with positive modulus of
convexity