Yoshimoto Cube
Yoshimoto Cube | |
---|---|
Type | Dissection puzzle |
Inventor | Yoshimoto Naoki |
Company | Museum of Modern Art |
Availability | 1971–present |
The Yoshimoto Cube is a polyhedral mechanical puzzle toy invented[1] in 1971 by Naoki Yoshimoto (吉本直貴 Yoshimoto Naoki), who discovered that two rhombic dodecahedrons could be pieced together into a square when he was finding different ways he could split a cube equally in half. Yoshimoto first introduced his cube in 1972 at a solo exhibition entitled "From Cube to Space," and later developed three commercial versions. In 1982, Yoshimoto Cube No. 1 was included in the Museum of Modern Art's permanent collection.[2]
The cube is made up of eight interconnected cubes which can be folded or unfolded indefinitely. The unfolded cube can be dissected and reassembled into two stellated rhombic dodecahedrons, each of which comprise half the volume of the original cube, making it a kind of three-dimensional dissection puzzle.
See also
- Rubik's Cube
- n-dimensional sequential move puzzles
References
- ↑ "Naoki Yoshimoto". The Moleskine Project. Retrieved 28 March 2013.
- ↑ "Yoshimoto Cube No. 1". Museum of Modern Art Store. Retrieved 28 March 2013.