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Polytope compound

In geometry, a polyhedral compound is a figure that is composed of several polyhedra sharing a common centre. They are the three-dimensional analogs of polygonal compounds such as the hexagram.

The outer vertices of a compound can be connected to form a convex polyhedron called its convex hull. A compound is a facetting of its convex hull.[citation needed]

Another convex polyhedron is formed by the small central space common to all members of the compound. This polyhedron can be used as the core for a set of stellations.

Regular compounds edit

A regular polyhedral compound can be defined as a compound which, like a regular polyhedron, is vertex-transitive, edge-transitive, and face-transitive. Unlike the case of polyhedra, this is not equivalent to the symmetry group acting transitively on its flags; the compound of two tetrahedra is the only regular compound with that property. There are five regular compounds of polyhedra:

Regular compound
(Coxeter symbol)
Picture Spherical Convex hull Common core Symmetry group Subgroup
restricting
to one
constituent
Dual-regular compound
Two tetrahedra
{4,3}[2{3,3}]{3,4}
    Cube

[1]

Octahedron *432
[4,3]
Oh
*332
[3,3]
Td
Two tetrahedra
Five tetrahedra
{5,3}[5{3,3}]{3,5}
    Dodecahedron

[1]

Icosahedron

[1]

532
[5,3]+
I
332
[3,3]+
T
Chiral twin
(Enantiomorph)
Ten tetrahedra
2{5,3}[10{3,3}]2{3,5}
    Dodecahedron

[1]

Icosahedron *532
[5,3]
Ih
332
[3,3]
T
Ten tetrahedra
Five cubes
2{5,3}[5{4,3}]
    Dodecahedron

[1]

Rhombic triacontahedron

[1]

*532
[5,3]
Ih
3*2
[3,3]
Th
Five octahedra
Five octahedra
[5{3,4}]2{3,5}
    Icosidodecahedron

[1]

Icosahedron

[1]

*532
[5,3]
Ih
3*2
[3,3]
Th
Five cubes

Best known is the regular compound of two tetrahedra, often called the stella octangula, a name given to it by Kepler. The vertices of the two tetrahedra define a cube, and the intersection of the two define a regular octahedron, which shares the same face-planes as the compound. Thus the compound of two tetrahedra is a stellation of the octahedron, and in fact, the only finite stellation thereof.

The regular compound of five tetrahedra comes in two enantiomorphic versions, which together make up the regular compound of ten tetrahedra.[1] The regular compound of ten tetrahedra can also be seen as a compound of five stellae octangulae.[1]

Each of the regular tetrahedral compounds is self-dual or dual to its chiral twin; the regular compound of five cubes and the regular compound of five octahedra are dual to each other.

Hence, regular polyhedral compounds can also be regarded as dual-regular compounds.

Coxeter's notation for regular compounds is given in the table above, incorporating Schläfli symbols. The material inside the square brackets, [d{p,q}], denotes the components of the compound: d separate {p,q}'s. The material before the square brackets denotes the vertex arrangement of the compound: c{m,n}[d{p,q}] is a compound of d {p,q}'s sharing the vertices of {m,n} counted c times. The material after the square brackets denotes the facet arrangement of the compound: [d{p,q}]e{s,t} is a compound of d {p,q}'s sharing the faces of {s,t} counted e times. These may be combined: thus c{m,n}[d{p,q}]e{s,t} is a compound of d {p,q}'s sharing the vertices of {m,n} counted c times and the faces of {s,t} counted e times. This notation can be generalised to compounds in any number of dimensions.[2]

Dual compounds edit

A dual compound is composed of a polyhedron and its dual, arranged reciprocally about a common midsphere, such that the edge of one polyhedron intersects the dual edge of the dual polyhedron. There are five dual compounds of the regular polyhedra.

The core is the rectification of both solids. The hull is the dual of this rectification, and its rhombic faces have the intersecting edges of the two solids as diagonals (and have their four alternate vertices). For the convex solids, this is the convex hull.

The tetrahedron is self-dual, so the dual compound of a tetrahedron with its dual is the regular stellated octahedron.

The octahedral and icosahedral dual compounds are the first stellations of the cuboctahedron and icosidodecahedron, respectively.

The small stellated dodecahedral (or great dodecahedral) dual compound has the great dodecahedron completely interior to the small stellated dodecahedron.[3]

Uniform compounds edit

In 1976 John Skilling published Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra which enumerated 75 compounds (including 6 as infinite prismatic sets of compounds, #20-#25) made from uniform polyhedra with rotational symmetry. (Every vertex is vertex-transitive and every vertex is transitive with every other vertex.) This list includes the five regular compounds above. [1]

The 75 uniform compounds are listed in the Table below. Most are shown singularly colored by each polyhedron element. Some chiral pairs of face groups are colored by symmetry of the faces within each polyhedron.

  • 1-19: Miscellaneous (4,5,6,9,17 are the 5 regular compounds)
           
           
           
 
           
           
           
           
   
  • 46-67: Tetrahedral symmetry embedded in octahedral or icosahedral symmetry,
           
           
           
       
           
   

Other compounds edit

   
The compound of four cubes (left) is neither a regular compound, nor a dual compound, nor a uniform compound. Its dual, the compound of four octahedra (right), is a uniform compound.

Two polyhedra that are compounds but have their elements rigidly locked into place are the small complex icosidodecahedron (compound of icosahedron and great dodecahedron) and the great complex icosidodecahedron (compound of small stellated dodecahedron and great icosahedron). If the definition of a uniform polyhedron is generalised, they are uniform.

The section for enantiomorph pairs in Skilling's list does not contain the compound of two great snub dodecicosidodecahedra, as the pentagram faces would coincide. Removing the coincident faces results in the compound of twenty octahedra.

4-polytope compounds edit

Orthogonal projections
   
75 {4,3,3} 75 {3,3,4}

In 4-dimensions, there are a large number of regular compounds of regular polytopes. Coxeter lists a few of these in his book Regular Polytopes.[4] McMullen added six in his paper New Regular Compounds of 4-Polytopes.[5]

Self-duals:

Compound Constituent Symmetry
120 5-cells 5-cell [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
120 5-cells(var) 5-cell order 1200[5]
720 5-cells 5-cell [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
5 24-cells 24-cell [5,3,3], order 14400[4]

Dual pairs:

Compound 1 Compound 2 Symmetry
3 16-cells[6] 3 tesseracts [3,4,3], order 1152[4]
15 16-cells 15 tesseracts [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
75 16-cells 75 tesseracts [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
75 16-cells(var) 75 tesseracts(var) order 600[5]
300 16-cells 300 tesseracts [5,3,3]+, order 7200[4]
600 16-cells 600 tesseracts [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
25 24-cells 25 24-cells [5,3,3], order 14400[4]

Uniform compounds and duals with convex 4-polytopes:

Compound 1
Vertex-transitive
Compound 2
Cell-transitive
Symmetry
2 16-cells[7] 2 tesseracts [4,3,3], order 384[4]
100 24-cells 100 24-cells [5,3,3]+, order 7200[4]
200 24-cells 200 24-cells [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
5 600-cells 5 120-cells [5,3,3]+, order 7200[4]
10 600-cells 10 120-cells [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
25 24-cells(var) 25 24-cells(var) order 600[5]

The superscript (var) in the tables above indicates that the labeled compounds are distinct from the other compounds with the same number of constituents.

Compounds with regular star 4-polytopes edit

Self-dual star compounds:

Compound Symmetry
5 {5,5/2,5} [5,3,3]+, order 7200[4]
10 {5,5/2,5} [5,3,3], order 14400[4]
5 {5/2,5,5/2} [5,3,3]+, order 7200[4]
10 {5/2,5,5/2} [5,3,3], order 14400[4]

Dual pairs of compound stars:

Compound 1 Compound 2 Symmetry
5 {3,5,5/2} 5 {5/2,5,3} [5,3,3]+, order 7200
10 {3,5,5/2} 10 {5/2,5,3} [5,3,3], order 14400
5 {5,5/2,3} 5 {3,5/2,5} [5,3,3]+, order 7200
10 {5,5/2,3} 10 {3,5/2,5} [5,3,3], order 14400
5 {5/2,3,5} 5 {5,3,5/2} [5,3,3]+, order 7200
10 {5/2,3,5} 10 {5,3,5/2} [5,3,3], order 14400

Uniform compound stars and duals:

Compound 1
Vertex-transitive
Compound 2
Cell-transitive
Symmetry
5 {3,3,5/2} 5 {5/2,3,3} [5,3,3]+, order 7200
10 {3,3,5/2} 10 {5/2,3,3} [5,3,3], order 14400

Compounds with duals edit

Dual positions:

Compound Constituent Symmetry
2 5-cell 5-cell [[3,3,3]], order 240
2 24-cell 24-cell [[3,4,3]], order 2304
1 tesseract, 1 16-cell tesseract, 16-cell
1 120-cell, 1 600-cell 120-cell, 600-cell
2 great 120-cell great 120-cell
2 grand stellated 120-cell grand stellated 120-cell
1 icosahedral 120-cell, 1 small stellated 120-cell icosahedral 120-cell, small stellated 120-cell
1 grand 120-cell, 1 great stellated 120-cell grand 120-cell, great stellated 120-cell
1 great grand 120-cell, 1 great icosahedral 120-cell great grand 120-cell, great icosahedral 120-cell
1 great grand stellated 120-cell, 1 grand 600-cell great grand stellated 120-cell, grand 600-cell

Group theory edit

In terms of group theory, if G is the symmetry group of a polyhedral compound, and the group acts transitively on the polyhedra (so that each polyhedron can be sent to any of the others, as in uniform compounds), then if H is the stabilizer of a single chosen polyhedron, the polyhedra can be identified with the orbit space G/H – the coset gH corresponds to which polyhedron g sends the chosen polyhedron to.

Compounds of tilings edit

There are eighteen two-parameter families of regular compound tessellations of the Euclidean plane. In the hyperbolic plane, five one-parameter families and seventeen isolated cases are known, but the completeness of this listing has not been enumerated.

The Euclidean and hyperbolic compound families 2 {p,p} (4 ≤ p ≤ ∞, p an integer) are analogous to the spherical stella octangula, 2 {3,3}.

A few examples of Euclidean and hyperbolic regular compounds
Self-dual Duals Self-dual
2 {4,4} 2 {6,3} 2 {3,6} 2 {∞,∞}
       
3 {6,3} 3 {3,6} 3 {∞,∞}
     

A known family of regular Euclidean compound honeycombs in any number of dimensions is an infinite family of compounds of hypercubic honeycombs, all sharing vertices and faces with another hypercubic honeycomb. This compound can have any number of hypercubic honeycombs.

There are also dual-regular tiling compounds. A simple example is the E2 compound of a hexagonal tiling and its dual triangular tiling, which shares its edges with the deltoidal trihexagonal tiling. The Euclidean compounds of two hypercubic honeycombs are both regular and dual-regular.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Compound Polyhedra". www.georgehart.com. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
  2. ^ Coxeter, Harold Scott MacDonald (1973) [1948]. Regular Polytopes (Third ed.). Dover Publications. p. 48. ISBN 0-486-61480-8. OCLC 798003.
  3. ^ "Great Dodecahedron-Small Stellated Dodecahedron Compound".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Regular polytopes, Table VII, p. 305
  5. ^ a b c d McMullen, Peter (2018), New Regular Compounds of 4-Polytopes, New Trends in Intuitive Geometry, 27: 307–320
  6. ^ Klitzing, Richard. "Uniform compound stellated icositetrachoron".
  7. ^ Klitzing, Richard. "Uniform compound demidistesseract".

External links edit

  • MathWorld: Polyhedron Compound
  • Compound polyhedra – from Virtual Reality Polyhedra
    • Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra
  • Skilling's 75 Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra
  • Skilling's Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra
  • http://users.skynet.be/polyhedra.fleurent/Compounds_2/Compounds_2.htm
  • Compound of Small Stellated Dodecahedron and Great Dodecahedron {5/2,5}+{5,5/2}
  • Klitzing, Richard. "Compound polytopes".

References edit

  • Skilling, John (1976), "Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra", Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 79 (3): 447–457, Bibcode:1976MPCPS..79..447S, doi:10.1017/S0305004100052440, MR 0397554, S2CID 123279687.
  • Cromwell, Peter R. (1997), Polyhedra, Cambridge{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • Wenninger, Magnus (1983), Dual Models, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, pp. 51–53.
  • Harman, Michael G. (1974), Polyhedral Compounds, unpublished manuscript.
  • Hess, Edmund (1876), "Zugleich Gleicheckigen und Gleichflächigen Polyeder", Schriften der Gesellschaft zur Berörderung der Gasammten Naturwissenschaften zu Marburg, 11: 5–97.
  • Pacioli, Luca (1509), De Divina Proportione.
  • Regular Polytopes, (3rd edition, 1973), Dover edition, ISBN 0-486-61480-8
  • Anthony Pugh (1976). Polyhedra: A visual approach. California: University of California Press Berkeley. ISBN 0-520-03056-7. p. 87 Five regular compounds
  • McMullen, Peter (2018), "New Regular Compounds of 4-Polytopes", New Trends in Intuitive Geometry, Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies, vol. 27, pp. 307–320, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-57413-3_12, ISBN 978-3-662-57412-6.

polytope, compound, geometry, polyhedral, compound, figure, that, composed, several, polyhedra, sharing, common, centre, they, three, dimensional, analogs, polygonal, compounds, such, hexagram, outer, vertices, compound, connected, form, convex, polyhedron, ca. In geometry a polyhedral compound is a figure that is composed of several polyhedra sharing a common centre They are the three dimensional analogs of polygonal compounds such as the hexagram The outer vertices of a compound can be connected to form a convex polyhedron called its convex hull A compound is a facetting of its convex hull citation needed Another convex polyhedron is formed by the small central space common to all members of the compound This polyhedron can be used as the core for a set of stellations Contents 1 Regular compounds 2 Dual compounds 3 Uniform compounds 4 Other compounds 5 4 polytope compounds 5 1 Compounds with regular star 4 polytopes 5 2 Compounds with duals 6 Group theory 7 Compounds of tilings 8 Footnotes 9 External links 10 ReferencesRegular compounds editThis section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message A regular polyhedral compound can be defined as a compound which like a regular polyhedron is vertex transitive edge transitive and face transitive Unlike the case of polyhedra this is not equivalent to the symmetry group acting transitively on its flags the compound of two tetrahedra is the only regular compound with that property There are five regular compounds of polyhedra Regular compound Coxeter symbol Picture Spherical Convex hull Common core Symmetry group Subgrouprestrictingto oneconstituent Dual regular compound Two tetrahedra 4 3 2 3 3 3 4 nbsp nbsp Cube 1 Octahedron 432 4 3 Oh 332 3 3 Td Two tetrahedra Five tetrahedra 5 3 5 3 3 3 5 nbsp nbsp Dodecahedron 1 Icosahedron 1 532 5 3 I 332 3 3 T Chiral twin Enantiomorph Ten tetrahedra2 5 3 10 3 3 2 3 5 nbsp nbsp Dodecahedron 1 Icosahedron 532 5 3 Ih 332 3 3 T Ten tetrahedra Five cubes2 5 3 5 4 3 nbsp nbsp Dodecahedron 1 Rhombic triacontahedron 1 532 5 3 Ih 3 2 3 3 Th Five octahedra Five octahedra 5 3 4 2 3 5 nbsp nbsp Icosidodecahedron 1 Icosahedron 1 532 5 3 Ih 3 2 3 3 Th Five cubes Best known is the regular compound of two tetrahedra often called the stella octangula a name given to it by Kepler The vertices of the two tetrahedra define a cube and the intersection of the two define a regular octahedron which shares the same face planes as the compound Thus the compound of two tetrahedra is a stellation of the octahedron and in fact the only finite stellation thereof The regular compound of five tetrahedra comes in two enantiomorphic versions which together make up the regular compound of ten tetrahedra 1 The regular compound of ten tetrahedra can also be seen as a compound of five stellae octangulae 1 Each of the regular tetrahedral compounds is self dual or dual to its chiral twin the regular compound of five cubes and the regular compound of five octahedra are dual to each other Hence regular polyhedral compounds can also be regarded as dual regular compounds Coxeter s notation for regular compounds is given in the table above incorporating Schlafli symbols The material inside the square brackets d p q denotes the components of the compound d separate p q s The material before the square brackets denotes the vertex arrangement of the compound c m n d p q is a compound of d p q s sharing the vertices of m n counted c times The material after the square brackets denotes the facet arrangement of the compound d p q e s t is a compound of d p q s sharing the faces of s t counted e times These may be combined thus c m n d p q e s t is a compound of d p q s sharing the vertices of m n counted c times and the faces of s t counted e times This notation can be generalised to compounds in any number of dimensions 2 Dual compounds edit nbsp Truncated tetrahedron light and triakis tetrahedron dark nbsp Snub cube light and pentagonal icositetrahedron dark nbsp Icosidodecahedron light and rhombic triacontahedron dark Dual compounds of Archimedean and Catalan solids A dual compound is composed of a polyhedron and its dual arranged reciprocally about a common midsphere such that the edge of one polyhedron intersects the dual edge of the dual polyhedron There are five dual compounds of the regular polyhedra The core is the rectification of both solids The hull is the dual of this rectification and its rhombic faces have the intersecting edges of the two solids as diagonals and have their four alternate vertices For the convex solids this is the convex hull Dual compound Picture Hull Core Symmetry group Two tetrahedra Compound of two tetrahedra stellated octahedron nbsp Cube Octahedron 432 4 3 Oh Cube and octahedron Compound of cube and octahedron nbsp Rhombic dodecahedron Cuboctahedron 432 4 3 Oh Dodecahedron and icosahedron Compound of dodecahedron and icosahedron nbsp Rhombic triacontahedron Icosidodecahedron 532 5 3 Ih Small stellated dodecahedron and great dodecahedron Compound of sD and gD nbsp Medial rhombic triacontahedron Convex Icosahedron Dodecadodecahedron Convex Dodecahedron 532 5 3 Ih Great icosahedron and great stellated dodecahedron Compound of gI and gsD nbsp Great rhombic triacontahedron Convex Dodecahedron Great icosidodecahedron Convex Icosahedron 532 5 3 Ih The tetrahedron is self dual so the dual compound of a tetrahedron with its dual is the regular stellated octahedron The octahedral and icosahedral dual compounds are the first stellations of the cuboctahedron and icosidodecahedron respectively The small stellated dodecahedral or great dodecahedral dual compound has the great dodecahedron completely interior to the small stellated dodecahedron 3 Uniform compounds editMain article Uniform polyhedron compound In 1976 John Skilling published Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra which enumerated 75 compounds including 6 as infinite prismatic sets of compounds 20 25 made from uniform polyhedra with rotational symmetry Every vertex is vertex transitive and every vertex is transitive with every other vertex This list includes the five regular compounds above 1 The 75 uniform compounds are listed in the Table below Most are shown singularly colored by each polyhedron element Some chiral pairs of face groups are colored by symmetry of the faces within each polyhedron 1 19 Miscellaneous 4 5 6 9 17 are the 5 regular compounds nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 20 25 Prism symmetry embedded in prism symmetry nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 26 45 Prism symmetry embedded in octahedral or icosahedral symmetry nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 46 67 Tetrahedral symmetry embedded in octahedral or icosahedral symmetry nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 68 75 enantiomorph pairs nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Other compounds edit nbsp nbsp The compound of four cubes left is neither a regular compound nor a dual compound nor a uniform compound Its dual the compound of four octahedra right is a uniform compound Compound of three octahedra Compound of four cubes Two polyhedra that are compounds but have their elements rigidly locked into place are the small complex icosidodecahedron compound of icosahedron and great dodecahedron and the great complex icosidodecahedron compound of small stellated dodecahedron and great icosahedron If the definition of a uniform polyhedron is generalised they are uniform The section for enantiomorph pairs in Skilling s list does not contain the compound of two great snub dodecicosidodecahedra as the pentagram faces would coincide Removing the coincident faces results in the compound of twenty octahedra 4 polytope compounds editOrthogonal projections nbsp nbsp 75 4 3 3 75 3 3 4 In 4 dimensions there are a large number of regular compounds of regular polytopes Coxeter lists a few of these in his book Regular Polytopes 4 McMullen added six in his paper New Regular Compounds of 4 Polytopes 5 Self duals Compound Constituent Symmetry 120 5 cells 5 cell 5 3 3 order 14400 4 120 5 cells var 5 cell order 1200 5 720 5 cells 5 cell 5 3 3 order 14400 4 5 24 cells 24 cell 5 3 3 order 14400 4 Dual pairs Compound 1 Compound 2 Symmetry 3 16 cells 6 3 tesseracts 3 4 3 order 1152 4 15 16 cells 15 tesseracts 5 3 3 order 14400 4 75 16 cells 75 tesseracts 5 3 3 order 14400 4 75 16 cells var 75 tesseracts var order 600 5 300 16 cells 300 tesseracts 5 3 3 order 7200 4 600 16 cells 600 tesseracts 5 3 3 order 14400 4 25 24 cells 25 24 cells 5 3 3 order 14400 4 Uniform compounds and duals with convex 4 polytopes Compound 1Vertex transitive Compound 2Cell transitive Symmetry 2 16 cells 7 2 tesseracts 4 3 3 order 384 4 100 24 cells 100 24 cells 5 3 3 order 7200 4 200 24 cells 200 24 cells 5 3 3 order 14400 4 5 600 cells 5 120 cells 5 3 3 order 7200 4 10 600 cells 10 120 cells 5 3 3 order 14400 4 25 24 cells var 25 24 cells var order 600 5 The superscript var in the tables above indicates that the labeled compounds are distinct from the other compounds with the same number of constituents Compounds with regular star 4 polytopes edit Self dual star compounds Compound Symmetry 5 5 5 2 5 5 3 3 order 7200 4 10 5 5 2 5 5 3 3 order 14400 4 5 5 2 5 5 2 5 3 3 order 7200 4 10 5 2 5 5 2 5 3 3 order 14400 4 Dual pairs of compound stars Compound 1 Compound 2 Symmetry 5 3 5 5 2 5 5 2 5 3 5 3 3 order 7200 10 3 5 5 2 10 5 2 5 3 5 3 3 order 14400 5 5 5 2 3 5 3 5 2 5 5 3 3 order 7200 10 5 5 2 3 10 3 5 2 5 5 3 3 order 14400 5 5 2 3 5 5 5 3 5 2 5 3 3 order 7200 10 5 2 3 5 10 5 3 5 2 5 3 3 order 14400 Uniform compound stars and duals Compound 1Vertex transitive Compound 2Cell transitive Symmetry 5 3 3 5 2 5 5 2 3 3 5 3 3 order 7200 10 3 3 5 2 10 5 2 3 3 5 3 3 order 14400 Compounds with duals edit Dual positions Compound Constituent Symmetry 2 5 cell 5 cell 3 3 3 order 240 2 24 cell 24 cell 3 4 3 order 2304 1 tesseract 1 16 cell tesseract 16 cell 1 120 cell 1 600 cell 120 cell 600 cell 2 great 120 cell great 120 cell 2 grand stellated 120 cell grand stellated 120 cell 1 icosahedral 120 cell 1 small stellated 120 cell icosahedral 120 cell small stellated 120 cell 1 grand 120 cell 1 great stellated 120 cell grand 120 cell great stellated 120 cell 1 great grand 120 cell 1 great icosahedral 120 cell great grand 120 cell great icosahedral 120 cell 1 great grand stellated 120 cell 1 grand 600 cell great grand stellated 120 cell grand 600 cellGroup theory editIn terms of group theory if G is the symmetry group of a polyhedral compound and the group acts transitively on the polyhedra so that each polyhedron can be sent to any of the others as in uniform compounds then if H is the stabilizer of a single chosen polyhedron the polyhedra can be identified with the orbit space G H the coset gH corresponds to which polyhedron g sends the chosen polyhedron to Compounds of tilings editThere are eighteen two parameter families of regular compound tessellations of the Euclidean plane In the hyperbolic plane five one parameter families and seventeen isolated cases are known but the completeness of this listing has not been enumerated The Euclidean and hyperbolic compound families 2 p p 4 p p an integer are analogous to the spherical stella octangula 2 3 3 A few examples of Euclidean and hyperbolic regular compounds Self dual Duals Self dual 2 4 4 2 6 3 2 3 6 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 3 6 3 3 3 6 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp A known family of regular Euclidean compound honeycombs in any number of dimensions is an infinite family of compounds of hypercubic honeycombs all sharing vertices and faces with another hypercubic honeycomb This compound can have any number of hypercubic honeycombs There are also dual regular tiling compounds A simple example is the E2 compound of a hexagonal tiling and its dual triangular tiling which shares its edges with the deltoidal trihexagonal tiling The Euclidean compounds of two hypercubic honeycombs are both regular and dual regular Footnotes edit a b c d e f g h i j Compound Polyhedra www georgehart com Retrieved 2020 09 03 Coxeter Harold Scott MacDonald 1973 1948 Regular Polytopes Third ed Dover Publications p 48 ISBN 0 486 61480 8 OCLC 798003 Great Dodecahedron Small Stellated Dodecahedron Compound a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Regular polytopes Table VII p 305 a b c d McMullen Peter 2018 New Regular Compounds of 4 Polytopes New Trends in Intuitive Geometry 27 307 320 Klitzing Richard Uniform compound stellated icositetrachoron Klitzing Richard Uniform compound demidistesseract External links editMathWorld Polyhedron Compound Compound polyhedra from Virtual Reality Polyhedra Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra Skilling s 75 Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra Skilling s Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra Polyhedral Compounds http users skynet be polyhedra fleurent Compounds 2 Compounds 2 htm Compound of Small Stellated Dodecahedron and Great Dodecahedron 5 2 5 5 5 2 Klitzing Richard Compound polytopes References editSkilling John 1976 Uniform Compounds of Uniform Polyhedra Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 79 3 447 457 Bibcode 1976MPCPS 79 447S doi 10 1017 S0305004100052440 MR 0397554 S2CID 123279687 Cromwell Peter R 1997 Polyhedra Cambridge a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wenninger Magnus 1983 Dual Models Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 51 53 Harman Michael G 1974 Polyhedral Compounds unpublished manuscript Hess Edmund 1876 Zugleich Gleicheckigen und Gleichflachigen Polyeder Schriften der Gesellschaft zur Berorderung der Gasammten Naturwissenschaften zu Marburg 11 5 97 Pacioli Luca 1509 De Divina Proportione Regular Polytopes 3rd edition 1973 Dover edition ISBN 0 486 61480 8 Anthony Pugh 1976 Polyhedra A visual approach California University of California Press Berkeley ISBN 0 520 03056 7 p 87 Five regular compounds McMullen Peter 2018 New Regular Compounds of 4 Polytopes New Trends in Intuitive Geometry Bolyai Society Mathematical Studies vol 27 pp 307 320 doi 10 1007 978 3 662 57413 3 12 ISBN 978 3 662 57412 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polytope compound amp oldid 1187337388 Dual compounds, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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