Deltahedron

Deltahedron
This is a truncated tetrahedron with hexagons subdivided into triangles. This figure is not a deltahedron since coplanar faces are not allowed within the definition.

A deltahedron (plural deltahedra) is a polyhedron whose faces are all equilateral triangles. The name is taken from the Greek majuscule delta (Δ), which has the shape of an equilateral triangle. There are infinitely many deltahedra, but of these only eight are convex, having 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 and 20 faces.(Freudenthal 1947) The number of faces, edges, and vertices is listed below for each of the eight convex deltahedra.

The deltahedra should not be confused with the deltohedra (spelled with an "o"), polyhedra whose faces are geometric kites.

Contents

The eight convex deltahedra

There are only 8 strictly-convex deltahedra:

Name Image Faces Edges Vertices Vertex configurations Symmetry group
regular tetrahedron Tetrahedron.jpg 4 6 4 4 × 33 Td
triangular dipyramid Triangular dipyramid.png 6 9 5 2 × 33
3 × 34
D3h
regular octahedron Octahedron.svg 8 12 6 6 × 34 Oh
pentagonal dipyramid Pentagonal dipyramid.png 10 15 7 5 × 34
2 × 35
D5h
snub disphenoid Snub disphenoid.png 12 18 8 4 × 34
4 × 35
D2d
triaugmented triangular prism Triaugmented triangular prism.png 14 21 9 3 × 34
6 × 35
D3h
gyroelongated square dipyramid Gyroelongated square dipyramid.png 16 24 10 2 × 34
8 × 35
D4d
regular icosahedron Icosahedron.jpg 20 30 12 12 × 35 Ih

Three of the deltahedra are Platonic solids (polyhedra in which a constant number of identical regular faces meet at each vertex). These are:

  • the 4-faced deltahedron (or tetrahedron), in which three faces meet at each vertex
  • the 8-faced deltahedron (or octahedron), in which four faces meet at each vertex
  • the 20-faced deltahedron (or icosahedron), in which five faces meet at each vertex

In the 6-faced deltahedron, some vertices have degree 3 and some degree 4. In the 10-, 12-, 14-, and 16-faced deltahedra, some vertices have degree 4 and some degree 5. These five irregular deltahedra belong to the class of Johnson solids: convex polyhedra with regular polygons for faces.

Deltahedra retain their shape, even if the edges are free to rotate around their vertices so that the angles between edges are fluid. Not all polyhedra have this property: for example, if you relax some of the angles of a cube, the cube can be deformed into a non-right square prism.

Non-convex forms

There are an infinite number of nonconvex forms.

Some examples of face-intersecting deltahedra:

Other nonconvex can be generated by adding equilateral pyramids to the faces of all 5 regular polyhedra:

  1. Equilateral triakis tetrahedron
  2. Equilateral tetrakis hexahedron
  3. Equilateral triakis octahedron (stella octangula)
  4. Equilateral pentakis dodecahedron
  5. Equilateral triakis icosahedron

Also by adding inverted pyramids to faces:

Great icosahedron.png
Great icosahedron
(20 intersecting triangles)
Stella octangula.png
stella octangula
(24 triangles)
Third stellation of icosahedron.png
Third stellation of icosahedron
(60 triangles)
Toroidal polyhedron.gif
A toroidal deltahedron
(48 triangles)

External links

References

  • Freudenthal, H; van der Waerden, B. L. (1947), "Over een bewering van Euclides ("On an Assertion of Euclid")" (in Dutch), Simon Stevin 25: 115–128  (They showed that there are just 8 convex deltahedra. )
  • H. Martyn Cundy Deltahedra. Math. Gaz. 36, 263-266, Dec 1952. [1]
  • H. Martyn Cundy and A. Rollett Deltahedra. §3.11 in Mathematical Models, 3rd ed. Stradbroke, England: Tarquin Pub., pp. 142-144, 1989.
  • Charles W. Trigg An Infinite Class of Deltahedra, Mathematics Magazine, Vol. 51, No. 1 (Jan., 1978), pp. 55-57 [2]
  • M. Gardner Fractal Music, Hypercards, and More: Mathematical Recreations, Scientific American Magazine. New York: W. H. Freeman, pp. 40, 53, and 58-60, 1992.
  • A. Pugh Polyhedra: A Visual Approach. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, pp. 35-36, 1976.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Borane — In chemistry, a borane is a chemical compound of boron and hydrogen. The boranes comprise a large group of compounds with the generic formulae of BxHy. These compounds do not occur in nature. Many of the boranes readily oxidise on contact with… …   Wikipedia

  • Polyhedron — Polyhedra redirects here. For the relational database system, see Polyhedra DBMS. For the game magazine, see Polyhedron (magazine). For the scientific journal, see Polyhedron (journal). Some Polyhedra Dodecahedron (Regular polyhedron) …   Wikipedia

  • Gyroelongated square dipyramid — Infobox Polyhedron Polyhedron Type=Johnson J16 J17 J18 Face List=2.8 triangles Edge Count=24 Vertex Count=10 Symmetry Group= D 4d Vertex List=2(34) 8(35) Dual=Square truncated trapezohedron Property List=convex, deltahedronIn geometry, the… …   Wikipedia

  • Triaugmented triangular prism — Infobox Polyhedron with net Polyhedron Type=Johnson J 50 J51 J52 Face List=2+2x6 triangles Edge Count=21 Vertex Count=9 Symmetry Group= D 3h Vertex List=3(34) 6(35) Dual= Property List=convex, deltahedron Net In geometry, the triaugmented… …   Wikipedia

  • Pentagonal dipyramid — Infobox face uniform polyhedron Polyhedron Type=Dipyramid and Johnson J12 J13 J14 Face List=10 triangles Edge Count=15 Vertex Count=7 Symmetry Group= D 5h Face Type=V4.4.5 Dual=pentagonal prism Property List=convex, face transitive,… …   Wikipedia

  • Snub disphenoid — Infobox Polyhedron with net Polyhedron Type=Johnson J83 J84 J85 Face List=4+8 triangles Edge Count=18 Vertex Count=8 Symmetry Group= D2d | Vertex List=4(34) 4(35) Dual= Property List=convex, deltahedron Net In geometry, the snub disphenoid is one …   Wikipedia

  • Polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory — In chemistry the polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory provides electron counting rules useful for predicting the structures of clusters such as borane and carborane clusters. The electron counting rules were originally formulated by Kenneth… …   Wikipedia

  • Sonobe — Examples of modular origami made up of Sonobe units: an augmented icosahedron and an augmented octahedron, which require 30 and 12 units, respectively. The Sonobe module is a unit used to build modular origami, created by Mitsunobu Sonobe. Each… …   Wikipedia

  • Bipyramid — For Dipyramid, see mountain and Dipyramid (Alaska). Set of bipyramids (Example hexagonal form) Faces 2n triangles Edges 3n Vertices n + 2 …   Wikipedia

  • Octahedron — For the album by The Mars Volta, see Octahedron (album). Regular Octahedron (Click here for rotating model) Type Platonic solid Elements F = 8, E = 12 V = 6 (χ = 2) Faces by sides …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”