Isotoxal figure

This article is about geometry. For edge transitivity in graph theory, see edge-transitive graph.

In geometry, a polytope (a polygon, polyhedron or tiling, for example) is isotoxal or edge-transitive if its symmetries act transitively on its edges. Informally, this means that there is only one type of edge to the object: given two edges, there is a translation, rotation and/or reflection that will move one edge to the other, while leaving the region occupied by the object unchanged.

The term isotoxal is derived from the Greek τοξον meaning arc.

Contents

Isotoxal polygons

An isotoxal polygon is an equilateral polygon, but not all equilateral polygons are isotoxal.

In general, an isotoxal 2n-gon will have Dn (*n) dihedral symmetry. A rhombus is a isotoxal polygon with D2 (*2) symmetry.

All regular polygons (equilateral triangle, square, etc.) are isotoxal, having double the minimum symmetry order: a regular n-gon has Dn (*n) dihedral symmetry. A square is a isotoxal polygon with D4 (*4) symmetry.

Example isotoxal polygons
Dihedral symmetry D2 (*2) D3 (*3) D4 (*4) D5 (*5)
Name Rhombus Equilateral triangle Concave hexagon Self-intersecting hexagon Square Convex octagon Regular pentagon Self-intersecting (regular) pentagram Self-intersecting decagram
Picture

Isotoxal polyhedra and tilings


The rhombille tiling is an isotoxal tiling with p6m (*632) symmetry.

An isotoxal polyhedron or tiling must be either isogonal (vertex-transitive) or isohedral (face-transitive) or both.

Regular polyhedra are isohedral (face-transitive), isogonal (vertex-transitive) and isotoxal. Quasiregular polyhedra are isogonal and isotoxal, but not isohedral; their duals are isohedral and isotoxal, but not isogonal.

Not every polyhedron or 2-dimensional tessellation constructed from regular polygons is isotoxal. For instance, the truncated icosahedron (the familiar soccerball) has two types of edges: hexagon-hexagon and hexagon-pentagon, and it is not possible for a symmetry of the solid to move a hexagon-hexagon edge onto a hexagon-pentagon edge.

An isotoxal polyhedron has the same dihedral angle for all edges.

There are nine convex isotoxal polyhedra formed from the Platonic solids, 8 formed by the Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra, and six more as quasiregular (3 | p q) star polyhedra and their duals.

There are 5 polygonal tilings of the Euclidean plane that are isotoxal, and infinitely many isotoxal polygonal tilings of the hyperbolic plane, including the Wythoff constructions from the regular hyperbolic tilings {p,q}, and non-right (p q r) groups.

See also

References