Dodecahedron

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Regular Dodecahedron

(Click here for rotating model)
TypePlatonic solid
ElementsF = 12, E = 30
V = 20 (χ = 2)
Faces by sides12{5}
Schläfli symbols{5,3}
Wythoff symbol3 | 2 5
Coxeter diagram
SymmetryIh, H3, [5,3], (*532)
Rotation groupI, [5,3]+, (532)
ReferencesU23, C26, W5
PropertiesRegular convex
Dihedral angle116.56505° = arccos(-1/5)

5.5.5
(Vertex figure)

Icosahedron
(dual polyhedron)

Net

In geometry, a dodecahedron (Greek δωδεκάεδρον, from δώδεκα, dōdeka "twelve" + ἕδρα hédra "base", "seat" or "face") is any polyhedron with twelve flat faces, but usually a regular dodecahedron is meant: a Platonic solid. It is composed of 12 regular pentagonal faces, with three meeting at each vertex, and is represented by the Schläfli symbol {5,3}. It has 20 vertices, 30 edges and 160 diagonals. Its dual polyhedron is the icosahedron, with Schläfli symbol {3,5}.

A large number of other (irregular) polyhedra also have twelve faces, most notably the topologically identical pyritohedron with Pyritohedral symmetry, and the rhombic dodecahedron with octahedral symmetry.

Dimensions

If the edge length of a regular dodecahedron is a, the radius of a circumscribed sphere (one that touches the dodecahedron at all vertices) is

r_{u}=a{\frac  {{\sqrt  {3}}}{4}}\left(1+{\sqrt  {5}}\right)\approx 1.401258538\cdot a A179296

and the radius of an inscribed sphere (tangent to each of the dodecahedron's faces) is

r_{i}=a{\frac  {1}{2}}{\sqrt  {{\frac  {5}{2}}+{\frac  {11}{10}}{\sqrt  {5}}}}\approx 1.113516364\cdot a

while the midradius, which touches the middle of each edge, is

r_{m}=a{\frac  {1}{4}}\left(3+{\sqrt  {5}}\right)\approx 1.309016994\cdot a

These quantities may also be expressed as

r_{u}=a\,{\frac  {{\sqrt  {3}}}{2}}\varphi
r_{i}=a\,{\frac  {\varphi ^{2}}{2{\sqrt  {3-\varphi }}}}
r_{m}=a\,{\frac  {\varphi ^{2}}{2}}

where φ is the golden ratio.

Note that, given a regular pentagonal dodecahedron of edge length one, ru is the radius of a circumscribing sphere about a cube of edge length φ, and ri is the apothem of a regular pentagon of edge length φ.

Area and volume

The surface area A and the volume V of a regular dodecahedron of edge length a are:

A=3{\sqrt  {25+10{\sqrt  {5}}}}a^{2}\approx 20.645728807a^{2}
V={\frac  {1}{4}}(15+7{\sqrt  {5}})a^{3}\approx 7.6631189606a^{3}

Two dimensional symmetry projections

The stellation diagram for the regular dodecahedron with the central pentagon highlighted. This diagram represents the dodecahedron face itself.
Animation of a net of a dodecahedron being folded

The dodecahedron has two special orthogonal projections, centered, on vertices and pentagonal faces, correspond to the A2 and H2 Coxeter planes.

Orthogonal projections
Centered by Vertex Edge Face
Image
Projective
symmetry
[[3]] = [6] [2] [[5]] = [10]

In perspective projection, viewed above a pentagonal face, the dodecahedron can be seen as a linear-edged schlegel diagram, or stereographic projection as a spherical polyhedron. These projections are also used in showing the four dimensional 120-cell, a regular 4-dimensional polytope, constructed from 120 dodecahedra, projecting it down to 3-dimensions.

Projection Orthogonal projection Perspective projection
Schlegel diagram Stereographic projection
Dodecahedron
Dodecaplex

Cartesian coordinates

Vertex coordinates:
     The orange vertices lie at (±1, ±1, ±1) and form a cube (dotted lines).
     The green vertices lie at (0, ±1/φ, ±φ) and form a rectangle on the yz plane.
     The blue vertices lie at (±1/φ, ±φ, 0) and form a rectangle on the xy plane.
     The pink vertices lie at (±φ, 0, ±1/φ) and form a rectangle on the xz plane.
The distance between adjacent vertices is 2/φ, and the distance from the origin to any vertex is √3.
φ = (1 + √5) / 2 is the golden ratio.

The following Cartesian coordinates define the vertices of a dodecahedron centered at the origin and suitably scaled and oriented:[1]

(±1, ±1, ±1)
(0, ±1/φ, ±φ)
(±1/φ, ±φ, 0)
φ, 0, ±1/φ)

where φ = (1 + √5) / 2 is the golden ratio (also written τ) ≈ 1.618. The edge length is 2/φ = √5 – 1. The containing sphere has a radius of √3.

Properties

  • The dihedral angle of a dodecahedron is 2 arctan(φ) or approximately 116.5650512 degrees (where again φ = (1 + √5) / 2, the golden ratio). A137218
  • If the original dodecahedron has edge length 1, its dual icosahedron has edge length φ.
  • If the five Platonic solids are built with same volume, the dodecahedron has the shortest edges.
  • It has 43,380 nets.
  • The map-coloring number of a regular dodecahedron's faces is 4.
  • The distance between the vertices on the same face not connected by an edge is φ times the edge length,

Geometric relations

The regular dodecahedron is the third in an infinite set of truncated trapezohedra which can be constructed by truncating the two axial vertices of a pentagonal trapezohedron.

The stellations of the dodecahedron make up three of the four Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra.

A rectified dodecahedron forms an icosidodecahedron.

The regular dodecahedron has icosahedral symmetry Ih, Coxeter group [5,3], order 120, with an abstract group structure of A5 × Z2.

Icosahedron vs dodecahedron

When a dodecahedron is inscribed in a sphere, it occupies more of the sphere's volume (66.49%) than an icosahedron inscribed in the same sphere (60.54%).

A regular dodecahedron with edge length 1 has more than three and a half times the volume of an icosahedron with the same length edges (7.663... compared with 2.181...).

A regular dodecahedron has 12 faces and 20 vertices, whereas a regular icosahedron has 20 faces and 12 vertices. Both have 30 edges.

Pyritohedron

Pyritohedron

A pyritohedron has 30 edges, divided into two lengths: 24 and 6 in each group.
Face polygonirregular pentagon
Coxeter diagrams
Faces12
Edges30 (6+24)
Vertices20 (8+12)
Symmetry groupTh, [4,3+], (3*2), order 24
Rotation groupT, [3,3]+, (332), order 12
Dual polyhedronPseudoicosahedron
Propertiesconvex
Net

A pyritohedron is a dodecahedron with pyritohedral (Th) symmetry. Like the regular dodecahedron, it has twelve identical pentagonal faces, with three meeting in each of the 20 vertices. However, the pentagons are not necessarily regular, so the structure normally has no fivefold symmetry axes. Its 30 edges are divided into two sets - containing 24 and 6 edges of the same length.

Although regular dodecahedra do not exist in crystals, the distorted, pyritohedron form occurs in the crystal pyrite, and it may be an inspiration for the discovery of the regular Platonic solid form.

Crystal pyrite

Its name comes from one of the two common crystal forms of pyrite, the other one being cubical.


Cubic pyrite

Pyritohedral

Ho-Mg-Zn quasicrystal

Cartesian coordinates

The coordinates of the 8 vertices:

(±1, ±1, ±1)

The coordinates of the 12 vertices are the permutations of:

(0, 1+h, 1−h2)

where h is the height of the wedge roof above the faces of the cube. When h=1, the 6 edges degenerate to points and rhombic dodecahedron is formed. For the regular dodecahedron, h=(√5−1)/2, the golden ratio.

Geometric freedom

The pyritohedron has a geometric degree of freedom with limiting cases of a cubic convex hull at one limit of colinear edges, and a rhombic dodecahedron as the other limit as 6 edges are degenerated to length zero. The regular dodecahedron represents a special intermediate case where all edges and angles are equal.

Special cases of the pyritohedron
1 : 1 1 : 1 2 : 1 1.3092... : 1 1 : 1 0 : 1
h=0 h=(√5−1)/2 h=1

Regular star, great stellated dodecahedron, with pentagons distorted into regular pentagrams

Concave pyritohedral dodecahedron

A cube can be divided into a pyritohedron by bisecting all the edges, and faces in alternate directions.

The geometric proportions of the pyritohedron in the Weaire–Phelan structure

A regular dodecahedron is an intermediate case with equal edge lengths.

A rhombic dodecahedron is the limiting case with the 6 crossedges reducing to length zero.

A regular dodecahedron can be formed from a cube in the following way: The top square in the cube is replaced by a "roof" composed of two pentagons, joined along the top of the roof. The diagonals in the pentagons parallel to the top of the roof coincide with two opposite sides of the square. The other five squares are replaced by a pair of pentagons in a similar way. The pyritohedron is constructed by changing the slope of these "roofs".

Other dodecahedra

Topologically identical[2] irregular dodecahedra

The truncated pentagonal trapezohedron has D5d dihedral symmetry.

The pyritohedron has Th tetrahedral symmetry.

The term dodecahedron is also used for other polyhedra with twelve faces, most notably the rhombic dodecahedron which is dual to the cuboctahedron (an Archimedean solid) and occurs in nature as a crystal form.[3] The Platonic solid dodecahedron can be called a pentagonal dodecahedron or a regular dodecahedron to distinguish it. The pyritohedron is an irregular pentagonal dodecahedron.

There are 6,384,634 topologically distinct convex dodecahedra, excluding mirror images, having at least 8 vertices.[4] (Two polyhedra are "topologically distinct" if they have intrinsically different arrangements of faces and vertices, such that it is impossible to distort one into the other simply by changing the lengths of edges or the angles between edges or faces.)

Topologically distinct dodecahedra include:

History and uses

Roman dodecahedron
Ho-Mg-Zn quasicrystal
Omnidirectional sound source
A climbing wall consisting of three dodecahedral pieces

Dodecahedral objects have found some practical applications, and have also played a role in the visual arts and in philosophy.

The dodecahedron was the last of the Platonic solids to be discovered. Iamblichus states that Hippasus, a Pythagorean, perished in the sea, because he boasted that he first divulged "the sphere with the twelve pentagons." [5] Plato's dialogue Timaeus (c. 360 B.C.) associates the other four platonic solids with the four classical elements, adding that there is a fifth figure (which is made out of twelve pentagons), the dodecahedron—"this God used in the delineation of the universe."[6] Aristotle postulated that the heavens were made of a fifth element, aithêr (aether in Latin, ether in American English), but he had no interest in matching it with Plato's fifth solid.

A few centuries later, small, hollow bronze Roman dodecahedra were made and have been found in various Roman ruins in Europe. Their purpose is not certain.

In 20th-century art, dodecahedra appear in the work of M.C. Escher, such as his lithograph Reptiles (1943), and in his Gravitation. In Salvador Dalí's painting The Sacrament of the Last Supper (1955), the room is a hollow dodecahedron.

In modern role-playing games, the dodecahedron is often used as a twelve-sided die, one of the more common polyhedral dice. Some quasicrystals have dodecahedral shape (see figure). Some regular crystals such as garnet and diamond are also said to exhibit "dodecahedral" habit, but this statement actually refers to the rhombic dodecahedron shape.[3]

Immersive media, a Camera manufacturing company, has made the Dodeca 2360 camera, the world's first 360°, full motion camera which captures high-resolution video from every direction simultaneously at more than 100 million pixels per second or 30 frames per second. It is based on dodecahedron.

The popular puzzle game Megaminx is in the shape of a dodecahedron.

In the children's novel The Phantom Tollbooth, the Dodecahedron appears as a character in the land of Mathematics. Each of his faces wears a different expression—e.g. happy, angry, sad—which he swivels to the front as required to match his mood.

Dodecahedron is the name of avant-garde black metal band from Netherlands.[7]

Shape of the universe

Various models have been proposed for the global geometry of the universe. In addition to the primitive geometries, these proposals include the Poincaré dodecahedral space, a positively curved space consisting of a dodecahedron whose opposite faces correspond (with a small twist). This was proposed by Jean-Pierre Luminet and colleagues in 2003[8][9] and an optimal orientation on the sky for the model was estimated in 2008.[10]

In Bertrand Russell's 1954 short story "THE MATHEMATICIAN'S NIGHTMARE: The Vision of Professor Squarepunt," the number 5 said: "I am the number of fingers on a hand. I make pentagons and pentagrams. And but for me dodecahedra could not exist; and, as everyone knows, the universe is a dodecahedron. So, but for me, there could be no universe."

As a graph

A Hamiltonian cycle in a dodecahedron.

The skeleton of the dodecahedron—the vertices and edges—form a graph. This graph can also be constructed as the generalized Petersen graph G(10, 2). The high degree of symmetry of the polygon is replicated in the properties of this graph, which is distance-transitive, distance-regular, and symmetric. The automorphism group has order 120. The vertices can be colored with 3 colors, as can the edges, and the diameter is 5.[11]

The dodecahedral graph is Hamiltonian—there is a cycle containing all the vertices. Indeed, this name derives from a mathematical game invented in 1857 by William Rowan Hamilton, the icosian game. The game's object was to find a Hamiltonian cycle along the edges of a dodecahedron.

Related polyhedra and tilings

The regular dodecahedron is topologically related to a series of tilings by vertex figure n3.

Spherical
Polyhedra
Polyhedra Euclidean Hyperbolic tilings

{2,3}

{3,3}

{4,3}

{5,3}

{6,3}

{7,3}

{8,3}
...
(∞,3}

The dodecahedron can be transformed by a truncation sequence into its dual, the icosahedron:

Family of uniform icosahedral polyhedra
Symmetry: [5,3], (*532) [5,3]+, (532)
{5,3} t{5,3} r{5,3} 2t{5,3}=t{3,5} 2r{5,3}={3,5} rr{5,3} tr{5,3} sr{5,3}
Duals to uniform polyhedra
V5.5.5 V3.10.10 V3.5.3.5 V5.6.6 V3.3.3.3.3 V3.4.5.4 V4.6.10 V3.3.3.3.5
Uniform octahedral polyhedra
Symmetry: [4,3], (*432) [4,3]+
(432)
[1+,4,3] = [3,3]
(*332)
[3+,4]
(3*2)
{4,3} t{4,3} r{4,3}
r{31,1}
t{3,4}
t{31,1}
{3,4}
{31,1}
rr{4,3}
s2{3,4}
tr{4,3} sr{4,3} h{4,3}
{3,3}
h2{4,3}
t{3,3}
s{4,3}
s{31,1}

=

=

=
=
or
=
or
=





Duals to uniform polyhedra
V43 V3.82 V(3.4)2 V4.62 V34 V3.43 V4.6.8 V34.4 V33 V3.62 V35

The regular dodecahedron is a member of a sequence of otherwise non-uniform polyhedra and tilings, composed of pentagons with face configurations (V3.3.3.3.n). (For n > 6, the sequence consists of tilings of the hyperbolic plane.) These face-transitive figures have (n32) rotational symmetry.

Dimensional family of snub polyhedra and tilings: 3.3.3.3.n
Symmetry
n32
[n,3]+
Spherical Euclidean Hyperbolic
232
[2,3]+
D3
332
[3,3]+
T
432
[4,3]+
O
532
[5,3]+
I
632
[6,3]+
P6
732
[7,3]+
832
[8,3]+
32
[,3]+
Snub
figure

3.3.3.3.2

3.3.3.3.3

3.3.3.3.4

3.3.3.3.5

3.3.3.3.6

3.3.3.3.7

3.3.3.3.8

3.3.3.3.
Coxeter
Schläfli

sr{2,3}

sr{3,3}

sr{4,3}

sr{5,3}

sr{6,3}

sr{7,3}

sr{8,3}

sr{,3}
Snub
dual
figure

V3.3.3.3.2

V3.3.3.3.3

V3.3.3.3.4

V3.3.3.3.5

V3.3.3.3.6

V3.3.3.3.7
V3.3.3.3.8 V3.3.3.3.
Coxeter

Vertex arrangement

The dodecahedron shares its vertex arrangement with four nonconvex uniform polyhedra and three uniform polyhedron compounds.

Five cubes fit within, with their edges as diagonals of the dodecahedron's faces, and together these make up the regular polyhedral compound of five cubes. Since two tetrahedra can fit on alternate cube vertices, five and ten tetrahedra can also fit in a dodecahedron.


Great stellated dodecahedron

Small ditrigonal icosidodecahedron

Ditrigonal dodecadodecahedron

Great ditrigonal icosidodecahedron

Compound of five cubes

Compound of five tetrahedra

Compound of ten tetrahedra

Stellations

The 3 stellations of the dodecahedron are all regular (nonconvex) polyhedra: (Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra)

0 1 2 3
Stellation
Dodecahedron

Small stellated dodecahedron

Great dodecahedron

Great stellated dodecahedron
Facet diagram

See also

References

  1. Weisstein, Eric W., "Icosahedral group", MathWorld.
  2. Polyhedra are "topologically identical" if they have the same intrinsic arrangement of faces and vertices, such that one can be distorted into the other simply by changing the lengths of edges or the angles between edges or faces.
  3. 3.0 3.1 [http://www.khulsey.com/jewelry/crystal_habit.html#h-5. Dodecahedral Crystal Habit]
  4. Counting polyhedra
  5. Florian Cajori, A History of Mathematics (1893)
  6. Plato, Timaeus, Jowett translation [line 1317-8]; the Greek word translated as delineation is 'diazographein', painting in semblance of life.
  7. "Dodecahedron on Metal Archives". 
  8. "Is the universe a dodecahedron?", article at PhysicsWeb.
  9. Luminet, Jean-Pierre; Jeff Weeks, Alain Riazuelo, Roland Lehoucq, Jean-Phillipe Uzan (2003-10-09). "Dodecahedral space topology as an explanation for weak wide-angle temperature correlations in the cosmic microwave background". Nature 425 (6958): 593–5. arXiv:astro-ph/0310253. Bibcode:2003Natur.425..593L. doi:10.1038/nature01944. PMID 14534579. 
  10. Roukema, Boudewijn; Zbigniew Buliński, Agnieszka Szaniewska, Nicolas E. Gaudin (2008). "A test of the Poincaré dodecahedral space topology hypothesis with the WMAP CMB data". Astronomy and Astrophysics 482 (3): 747. arXiv:0801.0006. Bibcode:2008A&A...482..747L. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20078777. 
  11. Weisstein, Eric W., "Dodecahedral Graph", MathWorld.
  • Plato's Fourth Solid and the "Pyritohedron", by Paul Stephenson, 1993, The Mathematical Gazette, Vol. 77, No. 479 (Jul., 1993), pp. 220–226
  • THE GREEK ELEMENTS

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.