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Decagon

In geometry, a decagon (from the Greek δέκα déka and γωνία gonía, "ten angles") is a ten-sided polygon or 10-gon.[1] The total sum of the interior angles of a simple decagon is 1440°.

Regular decagon

A regular decagon has all sides of equal length and each internal angle will always be equal to 144°.[1] Its Schläfli symbol is {10} [2] and can also be constructed as a truncated pentagon, t{5}, a quasiregular decagon alternating two types of edges.

Side length

 

The picture shows a regular decagon with side length   and radius   of the circumscribed circle.

  • The triangle   has to equally long legs with length   and a base with length  
  • The circle around   with radius   intersects   in a point   (not designated in the picture).
  • Now the triangle   is a isosceles triangle with vertex   and with base angles  .
  • Therefore  . So   and hence   is also a isosceles triangle with vertex  . The length of its legs is  , so the length of   is  .
  • The isosceles triangles   and   have equal angles of 36° at the vertex, and so they're similar, hence:  
  • Multiplication with the denominators   leads to the quadratic equation:  
  • This equation for the side length   has one positive solution:  

So the regular decagon can be constructed with ruler and compass.

Further conclusions

  and the base height of   (i.e. the length of  ) is   and the triangle has the area:  .

Area

The area of a regular decagon of side length a is given by:[3]

 

In terms of the apothem r (see also inscribed figure), the area is:

 

In terms of the circumradius R, the area is:

 

An alternative formula is   where d is the distance between parallel sides, or the height when the decagon stands on one side as base, or the diameter of the decagon's inscribed circle. By simple trigonometry,

 

and it can be written algebraically as

 

Sides

A regular decagon has 10 sides and is equilateral. It has 35 diagonals

Construction

As 10 = 2 × 5, a power of two times a Fermat prime, it follows that a regular decagon is constructible using compass and straightedge, or by an edge-bisection of a regular pentagon.[4]

 
Construction of decagon
 
Construction of pentagon

An alternative (but similar) method is as follows:

  1. Construct a pentagon in a circle by one of the methods shown in constructing a pentagon.
  2. Extend a line from each vertex of the pentagon through the center of the circle to the opposite side of that same circle. Where each line cuts the circle is a vertex of the decagon.  In other words,  the image of a regular pentagon under a point reflection with respect of its center is a concentric congruent pentagon,  and the two pentagons have in total the vertices of a concentric regular decagon.
  3. The five corners of the pentagon constitute alternate corners of the decagon. Join these points to the adjacent new points to form the decagon.

Nonconvex regular decagon

 
This tiling by golden triangles, a regular pentagon, contains a stellation of regular decagon, the Schäfli symbol of which is {10/3}.

The length ratio of two inequal edges of a golden triangle is the golden ratio, denoted by  , or its multiplicative inverse:

 
So we can get the properties of a regular decagonal star, through a tiling by golden triangles that fills this star polygon.

The golden ratio in decagon

Both in the construction with given circumcircle[5] as well as with given side length is the golden ratio dividing a line segment by exterior division the determining construction element.

  • In the construction with given circumcircle the circular arc around G with radius GE3 produces the segment AH, whose division corresponds to the golden ratio.
 
  • In the construction with given side length[6] the circular arc around D with radius DA produces the segment E10F, whose division corresponds to the golden ratio.
 
 
Decagon with given circumcircle,[5] animation
 
Decagon with a given side length,[6] animation

Symmetry

 
Symmetries of a regular decagon. Vertices are colored by their symmetry positions. Blue mirrors are drawn through vertices, and purple mirrors are drawn through edges. Gyration orders are given in the center.

The regular decagon has Dih10 symmetry, order 20. There are 3 subgroup dihedral symmetries: Dih5, Dih2, and Dih1, and 4 cyclic group symmetries: Z10, Z5, Z2, and Z1.

These 8 symmetries can be seen in 10 distinct symmetries on the decagon, a larger number because the lines of reflections can either pass through vertices or edges. John Conway labels these by a letter and group order.[7] Full symmetry of the regular form is r20 and no symmetry is labeled a1. The dihedral symmetries are divided depending on whether they pass through vertices (d for diagonal) or edges (p for perpendiculars), and i when reflection lines path through both edges and vertices. Cyclic symmetries in the middle column are labeled as g for their central gyration orders.

Each subgroup symmetry allows one or more degrees of freedom for irregular forms. Only the g10 subgroup has no degrees of freedom but can seen as directed edges.

The highest symmetry irregular decagons are d10, an isogonal decagon constructed by five mirrors which can alternate long and short edges, and p10, an isotoxal decagon, constructed with equal edge lengths, but vertices alternating two different internal angles. These two forms are duals of each other and have half the symmetry order of the regular decagon.

Dissection

10-cube projection 40 rhomb dissection
         
         

Coxeter states that every zonogon (a 2m-gon whose opposite sides are parallel and of equal length) can be dissected into m(m-1)/2 parallelograms.[8] In particular this is true for regular polygons with evenly many sides, in which case the parallelograms are all rhombi. For the regular decagon, m=5, and it can be divided into 10 rhombs, with examples shown below. This decomposition can be seen as 10 of 80 faces in a Petrie polygon projection plane of the 5-cube. A dissection is based on 10 of 30 faces of the rhombic triacontahedron. The list OEISA006245 defines the number of solutions as 62, with 2 orientations for the first symmetric form, and 10 orientations for the other 6.

Regular decagon dissected into 10 rhombi
 
5-cube
     
       

Skew decagon

3 regular skew zig-zag decagons
{5}#{ } {5/2}#{ } {5/3}#{ }
     
A regular skew decagon is seen as zig-zagging edges of a pentagonal antiprism, a pentagrammic antiprism, and a pentagrammic crossed-antiprism.

A skew decagon is a skew polygon with 10 vertices and edges but not existing on the same plane. The interior of such an decagon is not generally defined. A skew zig-zag decagon has vertices alternating between two parallel planes.

A regular skew decagon is vertex-transitive with equal edge lengths. In 3-dimensions it will be a zig-zag skew decagon and can be seen in the vertices and side edges of a pentagonal antiprism, pentagrammic antiprism, and pentagrammic crossed-antiprism with the same D5d, [2+,10] symmetry, order 20.

These can also be seen in these 4 convex polyhedra with icosahedral symmetry. The polygons on the perimeter of these projections are regular skew decagons.

Orthogonal projections of polyhedra on 5-fold axes
 
Dodecahedron
 
Icosahedron
 
Icosidodecahedron
 
Rhombic triacontahedron

Petrie polygons

The regular skew decagon is the Petrie polygon for many higher-dimensional polytopes, shown in these orthogonal projections in various Coxeter planes:[9] The number of sides in the Petrie polygon is equal to the Coxeter number, h, for each symmetry family.

A9 D6 B5
 
9-simplex
 
411
 
131
 
5-orthoplex
 
5-cube

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Sidebotham, Thomas H. (2003), The A to Z of Mathematics: A Basic Guide, John Wiley & Sons, p. 146, ISBN 9780471461630.
  2. ^ Wenninger, Magnus J. (1974), Polyhedron Models, Cambridge University Press, p. 9, ISBN 9780521098595.
  3. ^ The elements of plane and spherical trigonometry, Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1850, p. 59. Note that this source uses a as the edge length and gives the argument of the cotangent as an angle in degrees rather than in radians.
  4. ^ Ludlow, Henry H. (1904), Geometric Construction of the Regular Decagon and Pentagon Inscribed in a Circle, The Open Court Publishing Co..
  5. ^ a b Green, Henry (1861), Euclid's Plane Geometry, Books III–VI, Practically Applied, or Gradations in Euclid, Part II, London: Simpkin, Marshall,& CO., p. 116. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  6. ^ a b Köller, Jürgen (2005), Regelmäßiges Zehneck, → 3. Section "Formeln, Ist die Seite a gegeben ..." (in German). Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  7. ^ John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, (2008) The Symmetries of Things, ISBN 978-1-56881-220-5 (Chapter 20, Generalized Schaefli symbols, Types of symmetry of a polygon pp. 275-278)
  8. ^ Coxeter, Mathematical recreations and Essays, Thirteenth edition, p.141
  9. ^ Coxeter, Regular polytopes, 12.4 Petrie polygon, pp. 223-226.

External links

decagon, geometry, decagon, from, greek, δέκα, déka, γωνία, gonía, angles, sided, polygon, total, interior, angles, simple, decagon, 1440, regular, decagona, regular, decagontyperegular, polygonedges, vertices10schläfli, symbol, coxeter, dynkin, diagramssymmet. In geometry a decagon from the Greek deka deka and gwnia gonia ten angles is a ten sided polygon or 10 gon 1 The total sum of the interior angles of a simple decagon is 1440 Regular decagonA regular decagonTypeRegular polygonEdges and vertices10Schlafli symbol 10 t 5 Coxeter Dynkin diagramsSymmetry groupDihedral D10 order 2 10Internal angle degrees 144 PropertiesConvex cyclic equilateral isogonal isotoxalDual polygonSelf Contents 1 Regular decagon 1 1 Side length 1 2 Area 1 3 Sides 1 4 Construction 1 5 Nonconvex regular decagon 2 The golden ratio in decagon 3 Symmetry 4 Dissection 5 Skew decagon 5 1 Petrie polygons 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksRegular decagon EditA regular decagon has all sides of equal length and each internal angle will always be equal to 144 1 Its Schlafli symbol is 10 2 and can also be constructed as a truncated pentagon t 5 a quasiregular decagon alternating two types of edges Side length Edit The picture shows a regular decagon with side length a displaystyle a and radius R displaystyle R of the circumscribed circle The triangle E 10 E 1 M displaystyle E 10 E 1 M has to equally long legs with length R displaystyle R and a base with length a displaystyle a The circle around E 1 displaystyle E 1 with radius a displaystyle a intersects M E 10 displaystyle M E 10 in a point P displaystyle P not designated in the picture Now the triangle E 10 E 1 P displaystyle E 10 E 1 P is a isosceles triangle with vertex E 1 displaystyle E 1 and with base angles m E 1 E 10 P m E 10 P E 1 72 displaystyle m angle E 1 E 10 P m angle E 10 PE 1 72 circ Therefore m P E 1 E 10 180 2 72 36 displaystyle m angle PE 1 E 10 180 circ 2 cdot 72 circ 36 circ So m M E 1 P 72 36 36 displaystyle m angle ME 1 P 72 circ 36 circ 36 circ and hence E 1 M P displaystyle E 1 MP is also a isosceles triangle with vertex P displaystyle P The length of its legs is a displaystyle a so the length of P E 10 displaystyle P E 10 is R a displaystyle R a The isosceles triangles E 10 E 1 M displaystyle E 10 E 1 M and P E 10 E 1 displaystyle PE 10 E 1 have equal angles of 36 at the vertex and so they re similar hence a R R a a displaystyle frac a R frac R a a Multiplication with the denominators R a gt 0 displaystyle R a gt 0 leads to the quadratic equation a 2 R 2 a R displaystyle a 2 R 2 aR This equation for the side length a displaystyle a has one positive solution a R 2 1 5 displaystyle a frac R 2 1 sqrt 5 So the regular decagon can be constructed with ruler and compass Further conclusionsR 2 a 5 1 a 2 5 1 displaystyle R frac 2a sqrt 5 1 frac a 2 sqrt 5 1 and the base height of D E 10 E 1 M displaystyle Delta E 10 E 1 M i e the length of M D displaystyle M D is h R 2 a 2 2 a 2 5 2 5 displaystyle h sqrt R 2 a 2 2 frac a 2 sqrt 5 2 sqrt 5 and the triangle has the area A D a 2 h a 2 4 5 2 5 displaystyle A Delta frac a 2 cdot h frac a 2 4 sqrt 5 2 sqrt 5 Area Edit The area of a regular decagon of side length a is given by 3 A 5 2 a 2 cot p 10 5 2 a 2 5 2 5 7 694208843 a 2 displaystyle A frac 5 2 a 2 cot left frac pi 10 right frac 5 2 a 2 sqrt 5 2 sqrt 5 simeq 7 694208843 a 2 In terms of the apothem r see also inscribed figure the area is A 10 tan p 10 r 2 2 r 2 5 5 2 5 3 249196962 r 2 displaystyle A 10 tan left frac pi 10 right r 2 2r 2 sqrt 5 left 5 2 sqrt 5 right simeq 3 249196962 r 2 In terms of the circumradius R the area is A 5 sin p 5 R 2 5 2 R 2 5 5 2 2 938926261 R 2 displaystyle A 5 sin left frac pi 5 right R 2 frac 5 2 R 2 sqrt frac 5 sqrt 5 2 simeq 2 938926261 R 2 An alternative formula is A 2 5 d a displaystyle A 2 5da where d is the distance between parallel sides or the height when the decagon stands on one side as base or the diameter of the decagon s inscribed circle By simple trigonometry d 2 a cos 3 p 10 cos p 10 displaystyle d 2a left cos tfrac 3 pi 10 cos tfrac pi 10 right and it can be written algebraically as d a 5 2 5 displaystyle d a sqrt 5 2 sqrt 5 Sides Edit A regular decagon has 10 sides and is equilateral It has 35 diagonals Construction Edit As 10 2 5 a power of two times a Fermat prime it follows that a regular decagon is constructible using compass and straightedge or by an edge bisection of a regular pentagon 4 Construction of decagon Construction of pentagon An alternative but similar method is as follows Construct a pentagon in a circle by one of the methods shown in constructing a pentagon Extend a line from each vertex of the pentagon through the center of the circle to the opposite side of that same circle Where each line cuts the circle is a vertex of the decagon In other words the image of a regular pentagon under a point reflection with respect of its center is a concentric congruent pentagon and the two pentagons have in total the vertices of a concentric regular decagon The five corners of the pentagon constitute alternate corners of the decagon Join these points to the adjacent new points to form the decagon Nonconvex regular decagon Edit This tiling by golden triangles a regular pentagon contains a stellation of regular decagon the Schafli symbol of which is 10 3 The length ratio of two inequal edges of a golden triangle is the golden ratio denoted by F displaystyle Phi or its multiplicative inverse F 1 1 F 2 cos 72 1 2 cos 36 5 1 2 displaystyle Phi 1 frac 1 Phi 2 cos 72 circ frac 1 2 cos 36 circ frac sqrt 5 1 2 text So we can get the properties of a regular decagonal star through a tiling by golden triangles that fills this star polygon The golden ratio in decagon EditBoth in the construction with given circumcircle 5 as well as with given side length is the golden ratio dividing a line segment by exterior division the determining construction element In the construction with given circumcircle the circular arc around G with radius GE3 produces the segment AH whose division corresponds to the golden ratio A M M H A H A M 1 5 2 F 1 618 displaystyle frac overline AM overline MH frac overline AH overline AM frac 1 sqrt 5 2 Phi approx 1 618 text In the construction with given side length 6 the circular arc around D with radius DA produces the segment E10F whose division corresponds to the golden ratio E 1 E 10 E 1 F E 10 F E 1 E 10 R a 1 5 2 F 1 618 displaystyle frac overline E 1 E 10 overline E 1 F frac overline E 10 F overline E 1 E 10 frac R a frac 1 sqrt 5 2 Phi approx 1 618 text Decagon with given circumcircle 5 animation Decagon with a given side length 6 animationSymmetry Edit Symmetries of a regular decagon Vertices are colored by their symmetry positions Blue mirrors are drawn through vertices and purple mirrors are drawn through edges Gyration orders are given in the center The regular decagon has Dih10 symmetry order 20 There are 3 subgroup dihedral symmetries Dih5 Dih2 and Dih1 and 4 cyclic group symmetries Z10 Z5 Z2 and Z1 These 8 symmetries can be seen in 10 distinct symmetries on the decagon a larger number because the lines of reflections can either pass through vertices or edges John Conway labels these by a letter and group order 7 Full symmetry of the regular form is r20 and no symmetry is labeled a1 The dihedral symmetries are divided depending on whether they pass through vertices d for diagonal or edges p for perpendiculars and i when reflection lines path through both edges and vertices Cyclic symmetries in the middle column are labeled as g for their central gyration orders Each subgroup symmetry allows one or more degrees of freedom for irregular forms Only the g10 subgroup has no degrees of freedom but can seen as directed edges The highest symmetry irregular decagons are d10 an isogonal decagon constructed by five mirrors which can alternate long and short edges and p10 an isotoxal decagon constructed with equal edge lengths but vertices alternating two different internal angles These two forms are duals of each other and have half the symmetry order of the regular decagon Dissection Edit10 cube projection 40 rhomb dissection Coxeter states that every zonogon a 2m gon whose opposite sides are parallel and of equal length can be dissected into m m 1 2 parallelograms 8 In particular this is true for regular polygons with evenly many sides in which case the parallelograms are all rhombi For the regular decagon m 5 and it can be divided into 10 rhombs with examples shown below This decomposition can be seen as 10 of 80 faces in a Petrie polygon projection plane of the 5 cube A dissection is based on 10 of 30 faces of the rhombic triacontahedron The list OEIS A006245 defines the number of solutions as 62 with 2 orientations for the first symmetric form and 10 orientations for the other 6 Regular decagon dissected into 10 rhombi 5 cube Skew decagon Edit3 regular skew zig zag decagons 5 5 2 5 3 A regular skew decagon is seen as zig zagging edges of a pentagonal antiprism a pentagrammic antiprism and a pentagrammic crossed antiprism A skew decagon is a skew polygon with 10 vertices and edges but not existing on the same plane The interior of such an decagon is not generally defined A skew zig zag decagon has vertices alternating between two parallel planes A regular skew decagon is vertex transitive with equal edge lengths In 3 dimensions it will be a zig zag skew decagon and can be seen in the vertices and side edges of a pentagonal antiprism pentagrammic antiprism and pentagrammic crossed antiprism with the same D5d 2 10 symmetry order 20 These can also be seen in these 4 convex polyhedra with icosahedral symmetry The polygons on the perimeter of these projections are regular skew decagons Orthogonal projections of polyhedra on 5 fold axes Dodecahedron Icosahedron Icosidodecahedron Rhombic triacontahedronPetrie polygons Edit The regular skew decagon is the Petrie polygon for many higher dimensional polytopes shown in these orthogonal projections in various Coxeter planes 9 The number of sides in the Petrie polygon is equal to the Coxeter number h for each symmetry family A9 D6 B5 9 simplex 411 131 5 orthoplex 5 cubeSee also EditDecagonal number and centered decagonal number figurate numbers modeled on the decagon Decagram a star polygon with the same vertex positions as the regular decagonReferences Edit a b Sidebotham Thomas H 2003 The A to Z of Mathematics A Basic Guide John Wiley amp Sons p 146 ISBN 9780471461630 Wenninger Magnus J 1974 Polyhedron Models Cambridge University Press p 9 ISBN 9780521098595 The elements of plane and spherical trigonometry Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge 1850 p 59 Note that this source uses a as the edge length and gives the argument of the cotangent as an angle in degrees rather than in radians Ludlow Henry H 1904 Geometric Construction of the Regular Decagon and Pentagon Inscribed in a Circle The Open Court Publishing Co a b Green Henry 1861 Euclid s Plane Geometry Books III VI Practically Applied or Gradations in Euclid Part II London Simpkin Marshall amp CO p 116 Retrieved 10 February 2016 a b Koller Jurgen 2005 Regelmassiges Zehneck 3 Section Formeln Ist die Seite a gegeben in German Retrieved 10 February 2016 John H Conway Heidi Burgiel Chaim Goodman Strauss 2008 The Symmetries of Things ISBN 978 1 56881 220 5 Chapter 20 Generalized Schaefli symbols Types of symmetry of a polygon pp 275 278 Coxeter Mathematical recreations and Essays Thirteenth edition p 141 Coxeter Regular polytopes 12 4 Petrie polygon pp 223 226 External links EditWeisstein Eric W Decagon MathWorld Definition and properties of a decagon With interactive animation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Decagon amp oldid 1145839825, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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