In geometry, a Petrie polygon for a regular polytope of n dimensions is a skew polygon such that every (n-1) consecutive sides (but no n) belong to one of the facets. The Petrie polygon of a regular polygon is the regular polygon itself; that of a regular polyhedron is a skew polygon such that every two consecutive sides (but no three) belong to one of the faces.[1]
For every regular polytope there exists an orthogonal projection onto a plane such that one Petrie polygon becomes a regular polygon with the remainder of the projection interior to it. The plane in question is the Coxeter plane of the symmetry group of the polygon, and the number of sides, h, is Coxeter number of the Coxeter group. These polygons and projected graphs are useful in visualizing symmetric structure of the higher dimensional regular polytopes.
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John Flinders Petrie (1907-1972) was the only son of Egyptologist Sir W. M. Flinders Petrie. He was born in 1907 and as a schoolboy showed remarkable promise of mathematical ability. In periods of intense concentration he could answer questions about complicated four-dimensional objects by visualizing them.
He first realized the importance of the regular skew polygons which appear on the surface of regular polyhedra and higher polytopes. He was a lifelong friend of Coxeter, who named these polygons after him.
The idea of Petrie polygons was later extended to semiregular polytopes.
In 1972, a few months after his retirement, Petrie was killed by a car while attempting to cross a motorway near his home in Surrey.
The Petrie polygon of the regular polyhedron {p, q} has h sides, where
The regular duals, {p,q} and {q,p}, are contained within the same projected Petrie polygon.
tetrahedron | cube | octahedron | dodecahedron | icosahedron |
edge-centered | vertex-centered | face-centered | face-centered | vertex-centered |
4 sides | 6 sides | 6 sides | 10 sides | 10 sides |
V:(4,0) | V:(6,2) | V:(6,0) | V:(10,10,0) | V:(10,2) |
The Petrie polygons are the exterior of these orthogonal projections. Blue show "front" edges, while black lines show back edges. The concentric rings of vertices are counted starting from the outside working inwards with a notation: V:(a, b, ...), ending in zero if there are no central vertices. |
The Petrie polygon for the regular polychora {p, q ,r} can also be determined.
{3,3,3} 5-cell 5 sides V:(5,0) |
{3,3,4} 16-cell 8 sides V:(8,0) |
{4,3,3} tesseract 8 sides V:(8,8,0) |
{3,4,3} 24-cell 12 sides V:(12,6,6,0) |
{5,3,3} 120-cell 30 sides V:((30,60)3,603,30,60,0) |
{3,3,5} 600-cell 30 sides V:(30,30,30,30,0) |
The Petrie polygon projections are most useful for visualization of polytopes of dimension four and higher. This table represents Petrie polygon projections of 3 regular families (Simplex, Hypercube, Orthoplex), and the Exceptional Lie group En which generate semiregular and uniform polytopes for dimensions 4 to 8.
Group | An | BCn | Dn |
|
Hn | In(p) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | (Triangle) |
Hexagon |
Pentagon |
p-gon |
|||||||||||
3 | Tetrahedron |
Cube |
Octahedron |
Tetrahedron |
Dodecahedron |
Icosahedron |
|||||||||
4 | 5-cell |
16-cell |
24-cell |
120-cell |
600-cell |
||||||||||
5 | 5-simplex |
5-cube |
5-orthoplex |
5-demicube |
|||||||||||
6 | 6-simplex |
6-cube |
6-orthoplex |
6-demicube |
122 |
221 |
|||||||||
7 | 7-simplex |
7-cube |
7-orthoplex |
7-demicube |
132 |
231 |
321 |
||||||||
8 | 8-simplex |
8-cube |
8-orthoplex |
8-demicube |
142 |
241 |
421 |
||||||||
9 | 9-simplex |
9-cube |
9-orthoplex |
9-demicube |
|||||||||||
10 | 10-simplex |
10-cube |
10-orthoplex |
10-demicube |
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Family n |
n-simplex | n-hypercube | n-orthoplex | n-demicube | 1k2 | 2k1 | k21 |