2 21 polytope


221

Rectified 221

(122)

Birectified 221
(Rectified 122)
orthogonal projections in E6 Coxeter plane

In 6-dimensional geometry, the 221 polytope is a uniform 6-polytope, constructed within the symmetry of the E6 group. It was discovered by Thorold Gosset, published in his 1900 paper. He called it an 6-ic semi-regular figure.[1]

Its Coxeter symbol is 221, describing its bifurcating Coxeter-Dynkin diagram, with a single ring on the end of one of the 2-node sequences. He also studied[2] its connection with the 27 lines on the cubic surface, which are naturally in correspondence with the vertices of 221.

The rectified 221 is constructed by points at the mid-edges of the 221. The birectified 221 is constructed by points at the triangle face centers of the 221, and is the same as the rectified 122.

These polytopes are a part of family of 39 convex uniform polytopes in 6-dimensions, made of uniform 5-polytope facets and vertex figures, defined by all permutations of rings in this Coxeter-Dynkin diagram: .

2_21 polytope

221 polytope
TypeUniform 6-polytope
Familyk21 polytope
Schläfli symbol {3,3,32,1}
Coxeter symbol 221
Coxeter-Dynkin diagram or
5-faces99 total:
27 211
72 {34}
4-faces648:
432 {33}
216 {33}
Cells1080 {3,3}
Faces720 {3}
Edges216
Vertices27
Vertex figure121 (5-demicube)
Petrie polygonDodecagon
Coxeter groupE6, [32,2,1], order 51840
Propertiesconvex

The 221 has 27 vertices, and 99 facets: 27 5-orthoplexes and 72 5-simplices. Its vertex figure is a 5-demicube.

For visualization this 6-dimensional polytope is often displayed in a special skewed orthographic projection direction that fits its 27 vertices within a 12-gonal regular polygon (called a Petrie polygon). Its 216 edges are drawn between 2 rings of 12 vertices, and 3 vertices projected into the center. Higher elements (faces, cells, etc.) can also be extracted and drawn on this projection.

Alternate names

Coordinates

The 27 vertices can be expressed in 8-space as an edge-figure of the 421 polytope:

Construction

Its construction is based on the E6 group.

The facet information can be extracted from its Coxeter-Dynkin diagram, .

Removing the node on the short branch leaves the 5-simplex, .

Removing the node on the end of the 2-length branch leaves the 5-orthoplex in its alternated form: (211), .

Every simplex facet touches an 5-orthoplex facet, while alternate facets of the orthoplex touch either a simplex or another orthoplex.

The vertex figure is determined by removing the ringed node and ringing the neighboring node. This makes 5-demicube (121 polytope), .

Images

Vertices are colored by their multiplicity in this projection, in progressive order: red, orange, yellow. The number of vertices by color are given in parentheses.

Coxeter plane orthographic projections
E6
[12]
D5
[8]
D4 / A2
[6]
B6
[12/2]

(1,3)

(1,3)

(3,9)

(1,3)
A5
[6]
A4
[5]
A3 / D3
[4]

(1,3)

(1,2)

(1,4,7)

Geometric folding

The 221 is related to the 24-cell by a geometric folding of the E6/F4 Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams. This can be seen in the Coxeter plane projections. The 24 vertices of the 24-cell are projected in the same two rings as seen in the 221.

E6
F4

221

24-cell

This polytope can tessellate Euclidean 6-space, forming the 222 honeycomb with this Coxeter-Dynkin diagram: .

Related polytopes

The 221 is fourth in a dimensional series of semiregular polytopes. Each progressive uniform polytope is constructed vertex figure of the previous polytope. Thorold Gosset identified this series in 1900 as containing all regular polytope facets, containing all simplexes and orthoplexes.

k21 figures in n dimensional
Space Finite Euclidean Hyperbolic
En 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Coxeter
group
E3=A2A1 E4=A4 E5=D5 E6 E7 E8 E9 = {\tilde{E}}_{8} = E8+ E10 = {\bar{T}}_8 = E8++
Coxeter
diagram
Symmetry [3−1,2,1] [30,2,1] [31,2,1] [32,2,1] [33,2,1] [34,2,1] [35,2,1] [36,2,1]
Order 12 120 192 51,840 2,903,040 696,729,600
Graph - -
Name 121 021 121 221 321 421 521 621

The 221 polytope is fourth in dimensional series 2k2.

2k1 figures in n dimensions
Space Finite Euclidean Hyperbolic
n 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Coxeter
group
E3=A2A1 E4=A4 E5=D5 E6 E7 E8 E9 = {\tilde{E}}_{8} = E8+ E10 = {\bar{T}}_8 = E8++
Coxeter
diagram
Symmetry [3−1,2,1] [30,2,1] [[3<sup>1,2,1</sup>]] [32,2,1] [33,2,1] [34,2,1] [35,2,1] [36,2,1]
Order 12 120 384 51,840 2,903,040 696,729,600
Graph - -
Name 2-1,1 201 211 221 231 241 251 261

The 221 polytope is second in dimensional series 22k.

22k figures of n dimensions
Space Finite Euclidean Hyperbolic
n 5 6 7 8
Coxeter
group
A5 E6 {\tilde{E}}_{6}=E6+ E6++
Coxeter
diagram
Graph
Name 220 221 222 223

Rectified 2_21 polytope

Rectified 221 polytope
TypeUniform 6-polytope
Schläfli symbol t1{3,3,32,1}
Coxeter symbol t1(221)
Coxeter-Dynkin diagram or
5-faces126 total:

72 t1{34}
27 t1{33,4}
27 t1{3,32,1}

4-faces1350
Cells4320
Faces5040
Edges2160
Vertices216
Vertex figurerectified 5-cell prism
Coxeter groupE6, [32,2,1], order 51840
Propertiesconvex

The rectified 221 has 216 vertices, and 126 facets: 72 rectified 5-simplices, and 27 rectified 5-orthoplexes and 27 5-demicubes . Its vertex figure is a rectified 5-cell prism.

Alternate names

Construction

Its construction is based on the E6 group and information can be extracted from the ringed Coxeter-Dynkin diagram representing this polytope: .

Removing the ring on the short branch leaves the rectified 5-simplex, .

Removing the ring on the end of the other 2-length branch leaves the rectified 5-orthoplex in its alternated form: t1(211), .

Removing the ring on the end of the same 2-length branch leaves the 5-demicube: (121), .

The vertex figure is determined by removing the ringed ring and ringing the neighboring ring. This makes rectified 5-cell prism, t1{3,3,3}x{}, .

Images

Vertices are colored by their multiplicity in this projection, in progressive order: red, orange, yellow.

Coxeter plane orthographic projections
E6
[12]
D5
[8]
D4 / A2
[6]
B6
[12/2]
A5
[6]
A4
[5]
A3 / D3
[4]

See also

Notes

  1. Gosset, 1900
  2. Coxeter, H.S.M. (1940). "The Polytope 221 Whose Twenty-Seven Vertices Correspond to the Lines on the General Cubic Surface". Amer. J. Math. 62: 457–486. doi:10.2307/2371466. JSTOR 2371466.
  3. Elte, 1912
  4. Klitzing, (x3o3o3o3o *c3o - jak)
  5. Klitzing, (o3x3o3o3o *c3o - rojak)

References

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