Alternated cubic honeycomb | |
---|---|
Type | Uniform honeycomb |
Family | Alternated hypercubic honeycomb |
Schläfli symbol | h0{4,3,4} {3[4]} |
Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams | or |
Cell types | {3,3}, {3,4} |
Face types | triangle {3} |
Edge figure | [{3,3}.{3,4}]2 (rectangle) |
Vertex figure | (cuboctahedron) |
Cells/edge | [{3,3}.{3,4}]2 |
Faces/edge | 4 {3} |
Cells/vertex | {3,3}8+{3,4}6 |
Faces/vertex | 24 {3} |
Edges/vertex | 12 |
Symmetry group | Fm3m |
Coxeter groups | , [1+,4,3,4] (half) , [4,31,1] , [3[4]] |
Dual | rhombic dodecahedral honeycomb |
Properties | vertex-transitive, edge-transitive, face-transitive |
The tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb or alternated cubic honeycomb is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of alternating octahedra and tetrahedra in a ratio of 1:2.
It is vertex-transitive with 8 tetrahedra and 6 octahedra around each vertex. It is edge-transitive with 2 tetrahedra and 2 octahedra alternating on each edge.
It is part of an infinite family of uniform tessellations called alternated hypercubic honeycombs, formed as an alternation of a hypercubic honeycomb and being composed of demihypercube and cross-polytope facets.
In this case of 3-space, the cubic honeycomb is alternated, reducing the cubic cells to tetrahedra, and the deleted vertices create octahedral voids. As such it can be represented by an extended Schläfli symbol h{4,3,4} as containing half the vertices of the {4,3,4} cubic honeycomb.
There's a similar honeycomb called gyrated tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb which has layers rotated 60 degrees so half the edges have neighboring rather than alternating tetrahedra and octahedra.
This vertex arrangement is called the A3 lattice.[1]
Contents |
Wireframe (perspective) |
This diagram shows an exploded view of the cells surrounding each vertex. |
The alternated cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the planar square tiling by a geometric folding operation that maps two pairs of mirrors into each other. The projection of the alternated cubic honeycomb creates two offset copies of the square tiling vertex arrangement of the plane:
Coxeter group |
Coxeter diagram |
Graph |
---|---|---|
alternated cubic honeycomb |
||
square tiling |