Digon
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In geometry a digon is a degenerate polygon with two sides (edges) and two vertices.
A digon must be regular because its two edges are the same length. It has Schläfli symbol {2}.
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[edit] In spherical tilings
In Euclidean geometry a digon is always degenerate. However, in spherical geometry a nondegenerate digon (with a nonzero interior area) can exist if the vertices are antipodal. The internal angle of the spherical digon vertex can be any angle between 0 and 180 degrees. Such a spherical polygon can also be called a lune.
One antipodal digon on the sphere. |
Six antipodal digon faces on a hexagonal hosohedron tiling on the sphere. |
[edit] In polyhedra
A digon is considered degenerate face of a polyhedron because it has no geometric area and overlapping edges, but it can sometimes have a useful topological existence in transforming polyhedra.
Any polyhedron can be topologically modified by replacing an edge with a digon. Such an operation adds one edge and one face to the polyhedron, although the result is geometrically identical. This transformation has no effect on the Euler characteristic (χ=V-E+F).
A digon face can also be created by geometrically collapsing a quadrilateral face by moving pairs of vertices to coincide in space. This digon can then be replaced by a single edge. It loses one face, two vertices, and three edges, again leaving the Euler characteristic unchanged.
Classes of polyhedra can be derived as degenerate forms of a primary polyhedron, with faces sometimes being degenerated into coinciding vertices. For example, this class of 7 uniform polyhedron with octahedral symmetry exist as degenerate forms of the great rhombicuboctahedron (4.6.8). This principle is used in the Wythoff construction.
4.4.4 |
3.8.8 |
3.4.3.4 |
4.6.6 |
3.3.3.3 |
3.4.4.4 |
4.6.8 |
[edit] See also
- Dihedron - a degenerate polyhedron with 2 faces.
- Hosohedron - a degenerate polyhedron with 2 vertices.
[edit] References
- Eric W. Weisstein, Digon at MathWorld.
- A.B. Ivanov (2001), “Digon”, in Hazewinkel, Michiel, Encyclopaedia of Mathematics, Kluwer Academic Publishers, ISBN 978-1556080104
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Polygons. (Discuss) |
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