Great complex icosidodecahedron

Great complex icosidodecahedron
TypeUniform star polyhedron
ElementsF = 32, E = 60 (30x2)
V = 12 (χ = -16)
Faces by sides20{3}+12{5/2}
Wythoff symbol5 | 3 5/3
Symmetry groupIh, [5,3], *532
Index referencesU-, C-, W-
Dual polyhedronGreat complex icosidodecacron
Vertex figure
(3.5/3)5
(3.5/2)5/3
Bowers acronymGacid

In geometry, the great complex icosidodecahedron is a degenerate uniform star polyhedron. It has 12 vertices, and 60 (doubled) edges, and 32 faces, 12 pentagrams and 20 triangles. All edges are doubled (making it degenerate), sharing 4 faces, but are considered as two overlapping edges as topological polyhedron.

It can be constructed from a number of different vertex figures.

As a compound

The great complex icosidodecahedron can be considered a compound of the small stellated dodecahedron, {5/2,5}, and great icosahedron, {3,5/2}, sharing the same vertices and edges, while the second is hidden, being completely contained inside the first.

Its two-dimensional analogue would be the compound of a regular pentagon, {5}, and regular pentagram, {5/2}. These shapes would share vertices, similarly to how its 3D equivalent shares edges.

Compound polyhedron
Small stellated dodecahedron Great icosahedron Compound
Compound polygon
Pentagon Pentagram Compound

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.