Langley’s Adventitious Angles is a mathematical problem posed by Edward Mann Langley in the Mathematical Gazette in 1922.
In its original form the problem was as follows: is an isosceles triangle.
A solution was developed by James Mercer in 1923.
A quadrilateral such as BCEF in which the angles formed by all pairs of the six lines joining any two vertices, are rational multiples of π radians, i.e. n*180°/m, is called an adventitious quadrangle. Several constructions for other adventitious quadrangles, beyond the one appearing in Langley's puzzle, are known. They form several infinite families and an additional set of sporadic examples.
Classifying the adventitious quadrangles (which need not be convex) turns out to be equivalent to classifying all triple intersections of diagonals in regular polygons. This was solved by Gerrit Bol in 1936 (Beantwoording van prijsvraag # 17, Nieuw-Archief voor Wiskunde 18, pages 14-66). He in fact classified (though with a few errors) all multiple intersections of diagonals in regular polygons. His results (all done by hand!) were confirmed with computer, and the errors corrected, by Bjorn Poonen and Michael Rubinstein in 1998. The article contains a history of the problem and a remarkable picture featuring the regular 30-gon. "aerile re" which is active on yahoo"知恵袋" solved the unsolved adventitious quadrangles by the method of 3 circumcenters.