Rep-tile

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The "sphinx" polyiamond reptile. Four copies of the sphinx can be put together as shown to make a larger sphinx.

In the geometry of tessellations, a rep-tile or reptile is a shape that can be dissected into smaller copies of the same shape. The term was coined as a pun on animal reptiles by the American mathematician Solomon W. Golomb, who used it to describe self-replicating tilings.[1] In 2012 a generalization of rep-tiles called "self-tiling tile sets" was introduced by Lee Sallows in Mathematics Magazine.[2]

A selection of rep-tiles, including the sphinx, two fish and the 5-triangle

Terminology

A rep-tile is labelled rep-n if the dissection uses n copies. Such a shape necessarily forms the prototile for a tiling of the plane, in many cases an aperiodic tiling. A rep-tile dissection using different sizes of the original shape is called an irregular rep-tile or irreptile. If the dissection uses n copies, the shape is said to be irrep-n. If all these sub-tiles are of different sizes then the tiling is additionally described as perfect. A shape that is rep-n or irrep-n is trivially also irrep-(kn  k + n) for any k > 1, by replacing the smallest tile in the rep-n dissection by n even smaller tiles. The order of a shape, whether using rep-tiles or irrep-tiles is the smallest possible number of tiles which will suffice.

Examples

Defining an aperiodic tiling (the pinwheel tiling) by repeatedly dissecting and inflating a rep-tile.

Every square, rectangle, parallelogram, rhombus, or triangle is rep-4. The sphinx hexiamond (illustrated above) is rep-4 and rep-9, and is the only known self-replicating pentagon. The Gosper island is rep-7. The Koch snowflake is irrep-7: six small snowflakes of the same size, together with another snowflake with three times the area of the smaller ones, can combine to form a single larger snowflake.

A right triangle with side lengths in the ratio 1:2 is rep-5, and its rep-5 dissection forms the basis of the aperiodic pinwheel tiling. By Pythagoras' theorem, the hypotenuse, or sloping side of the rep-5 triangle, has a length of 5.

The international standard ISO 216 defines sizes of paper sheets using the Lichtenberg ratio, in which the long side of a rectangular sheet of paper is the square root of two times the short side of the paper. Rectangles in this shape are rep-2. A rectangle (or parallelogram) is rep-n if its aspect ratio is √n:1. An isosceles right triangle is also rep-2.

Rep-tiles and symmetry

Some rep-tiles, like the square and equilateral triangle, are symmetrical and remain identical when reflected in a mirror. Others, like the sphinx, are asymmetrical and exist in two distinct forms related by mirror-reflection. Dissection of the sphinx and some other asymmetric rep-tiles requires use of both the original shape and its mirror-image.

Rep-tiles and polyforms

Some rep-tiles are based on polyforms like polyiamonds and polyominoes, or shapes created by laying equilateral triangles and squares edge-to-edge.

Squares

If a polyomino is rectifiable, or able to tile a rectangle, then it will also be a rep-tile, because the rectangle can be used to tile a square (which is itself a special case of the rectangle). This can be seen clearly in the octominoes, which are created from eight squares. Two copies of some octominoes will tile a square, therefore these octominoes are also rep-16 rep-tiles.

Rep-tiles based on rectifiable octominoes

Four copies of some nonominoes and nonakings will tile a square, therefore these polyforms are also rep-36 rep-tiles.

Rep-tiles created from rectifiable nonominoes and 9-polykings (nonakings)

Equilateral triangles

Similarly, if a polyiamond tiles an equilateral triangle, it will also be a rep-tile.

Rep-tiles created from equilateral triangles


A rocket-like rep-tile created from a dodeciamond, or twelve equilateral triangles laid edge-to-edge (and corner-to-corner)

Right triangles

Polyforms based on isosceles right triangles, with angles 45°-90°-45°, are known as polyabolos. An infinite number of them are rep-tiles. Indeed, the simplest of all rep-tiles is a single isosceles right triangle. It is rep-2 when divided by a single line bisecting the right angle to the hypotenuse. Rep-2 rep-tiles are also rep-2n and the rep-4,8,16+ triangles yield further rep-tiles. These are found by discarding half of the sub-copies and permutating the remainder until they are mirror-symmetrical within a right triangle. In other words, two copies will tile a right triangle. One of these new rep-tiles is reminiscent of the fish formed from three equilateral triangles.

Rep-tiles based on right triangles
A fish-like rep-tile based on three equilateral triangles
A fish-like rep-tile based on four isosceles right triangles

Rep-tiles and fractals

Rep-tiles as fractals

Rep-tiles can be used to create fractals, or shapes that are self-similar at smaller and smaller scales. A rep-tile fractal is formed by subdividing the rep-tile, removing one or more copies of the subdivided shape, and then continuing recursively. For instance, the Sierpinski carpet is formed in this way from a rep-tiling of a square into 27 smaller squares, and the Sierpinski triangle is formed from a rep-tiling of an equilateral triangle into four smaller triangles. When one sub-copy is discarded, a rep-4 L-triomino can be used to create four fractals, two of which are identical except for orientation.

Geometrical dissection of an L-triomino (rep-4)
A fractal based on an L-triomino (rep-4)
Another fractal based on an L-triomino
A third fractal based on an L-triomino

Fractals as rep-tiles

Because fractals are self-similar on smaller and smaller scales, many are also self-tiling and are therefore rep-tiles. For example, the Sierpinski triangle is rep-3, tiled with three copies of itself, and the Sierpinski carpet is rep-8, tiled with eight copies of itself.

A Sierpinski triangle based on three smaller copies of a Sierpinski triangle
A Sierpinski carpet based on eight smaller copies of a Sierpinski carpet

Infinite tiling

Among regular polygons, only the triangle and square can be dissected into smaller equally sized copies of themselves. However, a regular hexagon can be dissected into six equilateral triangles, each of which can be dissected into a regular hexagon and three more equilateral triangles. This is the basis for an infinite tiling of the hexagon with hexagons. The hexagon is therefore an irrep- or irrep-infinity rep-tile.

See also

Notes

  1. Gardner, Martin. 1963. “On 'Rep-tiles,' Polygons that can make larger and smaller copies of themselves.” Scientific American 208 (May): 154-164.
  2. On Self-Tiling Tile Sets, by Lee Sallows,, Mathematics Magazine, Vol. 85, No. 5, December 2012

References

  • Gardner, M. "Rep-Tiles." Ch. 5 in The Colossal Book of Mathematics: Classic Puzzles, Paradoxes, and Problems. New York: W. W. Norton, pp. 46–58, 2001.
  • Gardner, M. "Rep-Tiles: Replicating Figures on the Plane." Ch. 19 in The Unexpected Hanging and Other Mathematical Diversions. Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press, pp. 222–233, 1991.
  • Langford, C. D. "Uses of a Geometric Puzzle." Math. Gaz., No. 260, 1940.
  • Wells, D. The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry. London: Penguin, pp. 213–214, 1991.
  • Scherer, Karl. "A Puzzling Journey to the Reptiles and Related Animals”, 1987

External links

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