Icosahedron

Wikipedia

In geometry, an icosahedron (/ˌkɒsəˈhdrən, -kə-, -k-/ or /ˌkɒsəˈhdrən/[1]) is a polyhedron with 20 faces. The name comes from Ancient Greek εἴκοσι (eíkosi) 'twenty' and ἕδρα (hédra) 'seat'. The plural can be either "icosahedra" (/-drə/) or "icosahedrons".

There are infinitely many non-similar shapes of icosahedra, some of them being more symmetrical than others. The best known is the (convex, non-stellated) regular icosahedron—one of the Platonic solids—whose faces are 20 equilateral triangles.

Regular icosahedra

Two kinds of regular icosahedra: the convex and non-convex

There are two objects, one convex and one nonconvex, that can both be referred to as regular icosahedra, characterized by 30 edges and 20 triangular faces. The term "regular icosahedron" generally refers to a convex polyhedron, both a deltahedron and a Platonic solid; it is also called "icosahedron" for a plain term.[2] A non-convex polyhedron version is the great icosahedron, a Kepler–Poinsot polyhedron. Both have icosahedral symmetry.

There are 59 stellations of a regular icosahedron according to Coxeter et al. in The Fifty-Nine Icosahedra. Being stellated means that a polyhedron extends its faces or edges until they meet to form a new polyhedron. It is done symmetrically so that the resulting figure retains the overall symmetry of the parent figure. The regular icosahedron and the great icosahedron are among them. Other stellations have more than one face in each plane or form compounds of simpler polyhedra. These are not strictly icosahedra, although they are often referred to as such.[3]

Notable stellations of the icosahedron
Regular Regular star Uniform duals
(Convex) icosahedron Great icosahedron Small triambic icosahedron Medial triambic icosahedron Great triambic icosahedron
Regular compounds Others
Compound of five octahedra Compound of five tetrahedra Compound of ten tetrahedra Excavated dodecahedron Final stellation

Pyritohedral icosahedra

Construction from the vertices of a truncated octahedron, showing internal rectangles.

A regular icosahedron can be distorted or marked up as a lower pyritohedral symmetry,[4][5] and is called a snub octahedron, snub tetratetrahedron, snub tetrahedron, and pseudo-icosahedron.[6] This can be seen as an alternated truncated octahedron. If all the triangles are equilateral, the symmetry can also be distinguished by colouring the 8 and 12 triangle sets differently.Pyritohedral symmetry has the symbol (3*2), [3+,4], with order 24. Tetrahedral symmetry has the symbol (332), [3,3]+, with order 12. These lower symmetries allow geometric distortions from 20 equilateral triangular faces, instead having 8 equilateral triangles and 12 congruent isosceles triangles. These symmetries offer Coxeter diagrams: and respectively, each representing the lower symmetry to the regular icosahedron , (*532), [5,3] icosahedral symmetry of order 120.

The Cartesian coordinates of the 12 vertices can be defined by the vectors defined by all the possible cyclic permutations and sign-flips of coordinates of the form (2, 1, 0). These coordinates represent the truncated octahedron with alternated vertices deleted. This construction is called a snub tetrahedron in its regular icosahedron form, generated by the same operations carried out starting with the vector (ϕ, 1, 0), where ϕ is the golden ratio.[5]

Progressions between an octahedron, pseudoicosahedron, and cuboctahedron. The cuboctahedron can flex this way even if its edges (but not its faces) are rigid.

A regular icosahedron is topologically identical to a cuboctahedron with its 6 square faces bisected on diagonals with pyritohedral symmetry. The icosahedra with pyritohedral symmetry constitute an infinite family of polyhedra which include the cuboctahedron, regular icosahedron, Jessen's icosahedron, and double cover octahedron. Cyclical kinematic transformations occur among the members of this family.

Other icosahedra

Other icosahedra, which include convex and non-convex, are the following, alongside their descriptions:

See also

References

  1. Jones, Daniel (2003) [1917], Peter Roach; James Hartmann; Jane Setter (eds.), English Pronouncing Dictionary, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 3-12-539683-2
  2. Cundy, H. Martyn (1952). "Deltahedra". The Mathematical Gazette. 36 (318): 263–266. doi:10.2307/3608204. JSTOR 3608204. S2CID 250435684.
  3. ; du Val, P.; Flather, H. T.; Petrie, J. F. (1938). The Fifty-Nine Icosahedra. Vol. 6. University of Toronto Studies (Mathematical Series).
  4. Koca, Nazife; Al-Mukhaini, Aida; Koca, Mehmet; Al Qanobi, Amal (2016). "Symmetry of the Pyritohedron and Lattices". Sultan Qaboos University Journal for Science. 21 (2): 139. doi:10.24200/squjs.vol21iss2pp139-149.
  5. 1 2 John Baez (September 11, 2011). "Fool's Gold".
  6. Kappraff, Jay (1991). Connections: The Geometric Bridge Between Art and Science (2nd ed.). World Scientific. p. 475. ISBN 978-981-281-139-4.