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								Bernardo M. Ábrego
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Silvia Fernández-Merchant
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Daniel J. Katz
							
              						
 
											- 
							
								Levon Kolesnikov
							
              						
 
									
			
																												
							
									
				
										Keywords:
				
				
																		Pattern, 													Similar copy, 													Similar triangle, 													Equilateral triangle, 													Arithmetic progression															
			
			
										
					
Abstract
					New bounds on the number of similar or directly similar copies of a pattern within a finite subset of the line or the plane are proved. The number of equilateral triangles whose vertices all lie within an $n$-point subset of the plane is shown to be no more than $\lfloor{(4 n-1)(n-1)/18}\rfloor$. The number of $k$-term arithmetic progressions that lie within an $n$-point subset of the line is shown to be at most $(n-r)(n+r-k+1)/(2 k-2)$, where $r$ is the remainder when $n$ is divided by $k-1$. This upper bound is achieved when the $n$ points themselves form an arithmetic progression, but for some values of $k$ and $n$, it can also be achieved for other configurations of the $n$ points, and a full classification of such optimal configurations is given. These results are achieved using a new general method based on ordering relations.