There was a question asked here, to show that a convex subset of $\mathbb R^2$ can be cut into $4$ pieces of equal area. In an attempt to prove it, I tried to more or less apply a "ham sandwich approach" twice and deduce the answer.
The problem was that although I could find two perpendicular lines that bisected the area of any compact set, I couldn't guarantee that these lines simultaneously divided the set into $4$ equal parts.
A friend of mine suggested considering a continuous map $f: S^1 \times K\to \mathbb R/(x \sim-x) ???$ (we couldn't decide on a co-domain) that took a line given by some angle with respect to the $x$-axis and a point in our convex subset $K$, and outputted the area swept out by a counterclockwise $90^{\circ}$ rotation about this line. Ultimately, we wished to look at the homology of $K$ since it is trivial and derive a contradiction. Yet this doesn't really use enough about convexity, only that $K$ is contractible.
my question: I'm not looking for an answer to the original question, but instead I'm asking if someone can exhibit a compact, contractible subset of $\mathbb R^2$ that cannot be dissected into $4$ equal parts by two perpendicular lines.
Edit 1: Since I deleted my answer, here is my "first impulse," which ended up being incorrect:
Step 1: I claim that a single line can bisect the area of a compact set into two pieces of equal area.
Since we know our set is compact, it is bounded and closed so we take the minimal and maximal $y$ coordinate of our set: $y_{min}$ and $y_{max}$. Then, all we want to do is consider a constant line (parallel to the $x$ axis) that moves up slowly, starting from the least y value and ending at the maximal one.
In other words, some function $\mathbb R^2 \times [0,1] \to \mathbb > R^2$ given by $(x,y,t) \mapsto (x,y_{min}+(y_{max}-y_{min})\cdot t)$. Notice that $(x,y,0)=(x,y_{min})$ and $(x,y,1)= (x,y_{max})$
Now, we consider a new function $g$ whose value at some time $t$ is exactly the area of $X$ under the line (Here, you can take the integral to be the area).
$g$ is continuous, just because the area in any $\epsilon$ amount of time is bounded by the extremal $x$-values.
Now, since the values of $g$ vary between zero and the area of the whole set, we apply the intermediate value theorem, to deduce that one half of the area will be attained at some time $t \in [0,1]$.
step 2: we do the same thing, except we take a vertical line and vary it. These two lines together will dissect our compact set into $4$ parts, and they will be perpendicular.
