- Schläfli symbol
In
mathematics , the Schläfli symbol is a notation of the form {p,q,r,...} that definesregular polytope s andtessellations .The Schläfli symbol is named after the 19th-century mathematician
Ludwig Schläfli who made important contributions ingeometry and other areas.See also
list of regular polytopes .Regular polygons (plane)
The Schläfli symbol of a regular
polygon with "n" edges is {"n"}.For example, a regular
pentagon is represented by {5}.See the convex
regular polygon and nonconvexstar polygon .For example, {5/2} is the
pentagram .Regular polyhedra (3-space)
The Schläfli symbol of a regular
polyhedron is {"p","q"} if its faces are "p"-gons, and each vertex is surrounded by "q" faces (thevertex figure is a "q"-gon).For example {5,3} is the regular
dodecahedron . It has pentagonal faces, and 3 pentagons around each vertex.See the 5 convex
Platonic solid s, the 4 nonconvexKepler-Poinsot polyhedra .Schläfli symbols may also be defined for regular
tessellation s of Euclidean or hyperbolic space in a similar way.For example, the
Hexagonal tiling is represented by {6,3}.Regular polychora (4-space)
The Schläfli symbol of a regular
polychoron is of the form {"p","q","r"}. It has {"p"} regular polygonal faces, {"p","q"} cells, {"q","r"} regular polyhedral vertex figures, and {"r"} regular polygonal edge figures.See the six convex regular and 10 nonconvex polychora.
For example, the
120-cell is represented by {5,3,3}. It is made ofdodecahedron cells {5,3}, and has 3 cells around each edge.There is also one regular tessellation of Euclidean 3-space: the
cubic honeycomb , with a Schläfli symbol of {4,3,4}, made of cubic cells, and 4 cubes around each edge.There are also 4 regular hyperbolic tessellations including {5,3,4}, the
Hyperbolic small dodecahedral honeycomb , which fills space withdodecahedron cells.Higher dimensions
For higher dimensional
polytope s, the Schläfli symbol is defined recursively as {"p"1, "p"2, ..., "p""n" − 1} if the facets have Schläfli symbol {"p"1,"p"2, ..., "p""n" − 2} and thevertex figure s have Schläfli symbol {"p"2,"p"3, ..., "p""n" − 1}.Notice that a vertex figure of a facet of a polytope and a facet of a vertex figure of the same polytope are the same: {"p"2,"p"3, ..., "p""n" − 2}.
There are only 3 regular polytopes in 5 dimensions and above: the
simplex , {3,3,3,...,3}; thecross-polytope , {3,3, ... ,3,4}; and thehypercube , {4,3,3,...,3}. There are no non-convex regular polytopes above 4 dimensions.Dual polytopes
For dimension 2 or higher, every polytope has a dual.
If a polytope has Schläfli symbol {"p"1,"p"2, ..., "p""n" − 1} then its dual has Schläfli symbol {"p""n" − 1, ..., "p"2,"p"1}.
If the sequence is the same forwards and backwards, the polytope is "self-dual". Every regular polytope in 2 dimensions (polygon) is self-dual.
Prismatic forms
Prismatic polytopes can be defined and named as a
Cartesian product of lower dimensional polytopes:
* A p-gonal prism, with vertex figure "p.4.4" as .
* A uniform {p,q}-hedral prism as .
* A uniform p-qduoprism as .A prism can also be represented as the truncation of a
hosohedron as , and anantiprism (snub hosohedron) as .Extended Schläfli symbols for uniform polytopes
Uniform polytope s, made from aWythoff construction , are represented by an extended truncation notation from a regular form {p,q,...}. There are a number of parallel symbolic forms that reference the elements of the "Schläfli symbol", discussed by dimension below.Uniform polyhedra and tilings
For polyhedra, one extended Schläfli symbol is used in the 1954 paper by Coxeter enumerating the paper tiled "uniform polyhedra".
Every regular polyhedron or tiling {p,q} has 7 forms, including the regular form and its dual, corresponding to positions within the fundamental right triangle. An 8th special form, the "snubs", correspond to an alternation of the omnitruncated form.
For instance, t{3,3} simply means
truncated tetrahedron .A second, more general notation, also used by Coxeter applies to all dimensions, and are specified by a t followed by a list of indices corresponding to
Wythoff construction mirrors. (They also correspond to ringed nodes in aCoxeter-Dynkin diagram .)For example, the
truncated hexahedron can be represented by t0,1{4,3} and it can be seen as midway between thecube , t0{4,3}, and thecuboctahedron , t1{4,3}.In each a Wythoff construction operational name is given first. Second some have alternate terminology (given in parentheses) apply only for a given dimension. Specifically omnitruncation and expansion, as well as dual relations apply differently in each dimension.
Uniform polychora and honeycombs
There are up to 15 different truncation forms for polychora and honeycombs based on each {p,q,r} regular form.
See
uniform polychoron andconvex uniform honeycomb .The subscripted-t notation is parallel to the graphical
Coxeter-Dynkin diagram , with each graph node representing the 4 hyperplanes of the reflection mirrors in the fundamental domain.References
* "The Beauty of Geometry: Twelve Essays" (1999), Dover Publications ISBN 978-0-486-40919-1 (Chapter 3: Wythoff's construction for uniform polytopes, p41-53)
* Johnson, N.W. "Uniform Polytopes", Manuscript (1991)
* Johnson, N.W. "The Theory of Uniform Polytopes and Honeycombs", Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Toronto, 1966
* Coxeter, H.S.M.; "Regular Polytopes", (Methuen and Co., 1948). (pp. 14, 69, 149)
* Coxeter, Longuet-Higgins, Miller, "Uniform polyhedra", Phil. Trans. 1954, 246 A, 401-50. (Extended Schläfli notation defined: Table 1: p 403)External links
*
* [http://bbs.sachina.pku.edu.cn/Stat/Math_World/math/w/w166.htm Wythoff Symbol and generalized Schläfli Symbols]
* [http://www.ac-noumea.nc/maths/amc/polyhedr/names_.htm polyhedral names et notations]
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