- Holyhedron
In
mathematics , a holyhedron is a type of 3-dimensional geometric body: apolyhedron each of whose faces contains at least onepolygon -shapedhole , and whose holes' boundaries share no point with each other or the face's boundary.The concept was first introduced by
John H. Conway ; the term "holyhedron" was coined byDavid W. Wilson in1997 as a pun involving polyhedra and holes. Conway also offered a prize of 10,000USD , divided by the number of faces for finding an example, asking::"Is there a polyhedron in Euclidean three-dimensional space that has only finitely many plane faces, each of which is a closed connected subset of the appropriate plane whose relative interior in that plane is multiply connected?"
No actual holyhedron was constructed until
1999 , whenJade P. Vinson presented an example of a holyhedron with a total of 78,585,627 faces; another example was subsequently given byDon Hatch , who presented a holyhedron with 492 faces in2003 , worth about 20.33USD prize money.External links
* [http://www.plunk.org/~hatch/Holyhedron/ Don Hatch's 492-face holyhedron]
* [http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20000617/mathtrek.asp MathTrek: Punctured Polyhedra]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.