List Of Uniform Polyhedra By Schwarz Triangle
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There are many relationships among the
uniform polyhedra In geometry, a uniform polyhedron has regular polygons as faces and is vertex-transitive—there is an isometry mapping any vertex onto any other. It follows that all vertices are congruent. Uniform polyhedra may be regular (if also fac ...
. The
Wythoff construction In geometry, a Wythoff construction, named after mathematician Willem Abraham Wythoff, is a method for constructing a uniform polyhedron or plane tiling. It is often referred to as Wythoff's kaleidoscopic construction. Construction process ...
is able to construct almost all of the uniform polyhedra from the acute and obtuse Schwarz triangles. The numbers that can be used for the sides of a non- dihedral acute or obtuse Schwarz triangle that does not necessarily lead to only degenerate uniform polyhedra are 2, 3, 3/2, 4, 4/3, 5, 5/2, 5/3, and 5/4 (but numbers with numerator 4 and those with numerator 5 may not occur together). (4/2 can also be used, but only leads to degenerate uniform polyhedra as 4 and 2 have a common factor.) There are 44 such Schwarz triangles (5 with
tetrahedral symmetry image:tetrahedron.svg, 150px, A regular tetrahedron, an example of a solid with full tetrahedral symmetry A regular tetrahedron has 12 rotational (or orientation-preserving) symmetries, and a symmetry order of 24 including transformations that co ...
, 7 with
octahedral symmetry A regular octahedron has 24 rotational (or orientation-preserving) symmetries, and 48 symmetries altogether. These include transformations that combine a reflection and a rotation. A cube has the same set of symmetries, since it is the polyhedr ...
and 32 with
icosahedral symmetry In mathematics, and especially in geometry, an object has icosahedral symmetry if it has the same symmetries as a regular icosahedron. Examples of other polyhedra with icosahedral symmetry include the regular dodecahedron (the dual polyhedr ...
), which, together with the infinite family of dihedral Schwarz triangles, can form almost all of the non- degenerate uniform polyhedra. Many degenerate uniform polyhedra, with completely coincident vertices, edges, or faces, may also be generated by the Wythoff construction, and those that arise from Schwarz triangles not using 4/2 are also given in the tables below along with their non-degenerate counterparts. Reflex Schwarz triangles have not been included, as they simply create duplicates or degenerates; however, a few are mentioned outside the tables due to their application to three of the snub polyhedra. There are a few non-Wythoffian uniform polyhedra, which no Schwarz triangles can generate; however, most of them can be generated using the Wythoff construction as double covers (the non-Wythoffian polyhedron is covered twice instead of once) or with several additional coinciding faces that must be discarded to leave no more than two faces at every edge (see Omnitruncated polyhedron#Other even-sided nonconvex polyhedra). Such polyhedra are marked by an asterisk in this list. The only uniform polyhedra which still fail to be generated by the Wythoff construction are the
great dirhombicosidodecahedron In geometry, the great dirhombicosidodecahedron (or great snub disicosidisdodecahedron) is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed last as . It has 124 faces (40 Triangle, triangles, 60 Square, squares, and 24 Pentagram, pentagrams), 240 Edge (g ...
and the
great disnub dirhombidodecahedron In geometry, the great disnub dirhombidodecahedron, also called ''Skilling's figure'', is a degenerate uniform star polyhedron. It was proven in 1970 that there are only 75 uniform polyhedra other than the infinite families of prisms and antip ...
. Each tiling of Schwarz triangles on a sphere may cover the sphere only once, or it may instead wind round the sphere a whole number of times, crossing itself in the process. The number of times the tiling winds round the sphere is the
density Density (volumetric mass density or specific mass) is the ratio of a substance's mass to its volume. The symbol most often used for density is ''ρ'' (the lower case Greek letter rho), although the Latin letter ''D'' (or ''d'') can also be u ...
of the tiling, and is denoted μ. Jonathan Bowers' short names for the polyhedra, known as Bowers acronyms, are used instead of the full names for the polyhedra to save space. The Maeder index is also given. Except for the dihedral Schwarz triangles, the Schwarz triangles are ordered by their densities. The analogous cases of Euclidean tilings are also listed, and those of hyperbolic tilings briefly and incompletely discussed.


Möbius and Schwarz triangles

There are 4 spherical triangles with angles π/p, π/q, π/r, where (p q r) are integers: (
Coxeter Harold Scott MacDonald "Donald" Coxeter (9 February 1907 – 31 March 2003) was a British-Canadian geometer and mathematician. He is regarded as one of the greatest geometers of the 20th century. Coxeter was born in England and educated ...
, "Uniform polyhedra", 1954) # (2 2 r) - Dihedral # (2 3 3) - Tetrahedral # (2 3 4) - Octahedral # (2 3 5) - Icosahedral These are called Möbius triangles. In addition
Schwarz triangle In geometry, a Schwarz triangle, named after Hermann Schwarz, is a spherical triangle that can be used to tile a sphere (spherical tiling), possibly overlapping, through reflections in its edges. They were classified in . These can be defined mor ...
s consider (p q r) which are rational numbers. Each of these can be classified in one of the 4 sets above. Although a polyhedron usually has the same density as the Schwarz triangle it is generated from, this is not always the case. Firstly, polyhedra that have faces passing through the centre of the model (including the
hemipolyhedra In geometry, a hemipolyhedron is a uniform star polyhedron some of whose faces pass through its center. These "hemi" faces lie parallel to the faces of some other symmetrical polyhedron, and their count is half the number of faces of that other p ...
,
great dirhombicosidodecahedron In geometry, the great dirhombicosidodecahedron (or great snub disicosidisdodecahedron) is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed last as . It has 124 faces (40 Triangle, triangles, 60 Square, squares, and 24 Pentagram, pentagrams), 240 Edge (g ...
, and
great disnub dirhombidodecahedron In geometry, the great disnub dirhombidodecahedron, also called ''Skilling's figure'', is a degenerate uniform star polyhedron. It was proven in 1970 that there are only 75 uniform polyhedra other than the infinite families of prisms and antip ...
) do not have a well-defined density. Secondly, the distortion necessary to recover uniformity when changing a spherical polyhedron to its planar counterpart can push faces through the centre of the polyhedron and back out the other side, changing the density. This happens in the following cases: *The
great truncated cuboctahedron In geometry, the great truncated cuboctahedron (or quasitruncated cuboctahedron or stellatruncated cuboctahedron) is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed as U20. It has 26 faces (12 squares, 8 hexagons and 6 octagrams), 72 edges, and 48 vertic ...
, 2 3 4/3 , . While the Schwarz triangle (2 3 4/3) has density 7, recovering uniformity pushes the eight hexagons through the centre, yielding density , 7 − 8, = 1, the same as that of the colunar Schwarz triangle (2 3 4) that shares the same great circles. *The
truncated dodecadodecahedron In geometry, the truncated dodecadodecahedron (or stellatruncated dodecadodecahedron) is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed as U59. It is given a Schläfli symbol It has 54 faces (30 squares, 12 decagons, and 12 decagrams), 180 edges, and ...
, 2 5/3 5 , . While the Schwarz triangle (2 5/3 5) has density 9, recovering uniformity pushes the twelve decagons through the centre, yielding density , 9 − 12, = 3, the same as that of the colunar Schwarz triangle (2 5/2 5) that shares the same great circles. *Three snub polyhedra: the
great icosahedron In geometry, the great icosahedron is one of four Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra (nonconvex List of regular polytopes#Non-convex 2, regular polyhedra), with Schläfli symbol and Coxeter-Dynkin diagram of . It is composed of 20 intersecting triangul ...
, 2 3/2 3/2, the small retrosnub icosicosidodecahedron , 3/2 3/2 5/2, and the
great retrosnub icosidodecahedron In geometry, the great retrosnub icosidodecahedron or great inverted retrosnub icosidodecahedron is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed as . It has 92 faces (80 triangles and 12 pentagrams), 150 edges, and 60 vertices. It is given a Schläf ...
, 2 3/2 5/3. Here the vertex figures have been distorted into pentagrams or hexagrams rather than pentagons or hexagons, pushing all the snub triangles through the centre and yielding densities of , 5 − 12, = 7, , 22 − 60, = 38, and , 23 − 60, = 37 respectively. These densities are the same as those of colunar ''reflex''-angled Schwarz triangles that are not included above. Thus the great icosahedron may be considered to come from (2/3 3 3) or (2 3 3/4), the small retrosnub icosicosidodecahedron from (3 3 5/8) or (3 3/4 5/3), and the great retrosnub icosidodecahedron from (2/3 3 5/2), (2 3/4 5/3), or (2 3 5/7). (Coxeter, "Uniform polyhedra", 1954)


Summary table

There are seven generator points with each set of p,q,r (and a few special forms): There are four special cases: * p q – This is a mixture of p q r and p q s . Both the symbols p q r and p q s generate a common base polyhedron with some extra faces. The notation p q then represents the base polyhedron, made up of the faces common to both p q r and p q s . * p q r – Snub forms (alternated) are given this otherwise unused symbol. * p q r s – A unique snub form for U75 that isn't Wythoff-constructible using triangular fundamental domains. Four numbers are included in this Wythoff symbol as this polyhedron has a tetragonal spherical fundamental domain. * (p) q (r) s – A unique snub form for
Skilling's figure In geometry, the great disnub dirhombidodecahedron, also called ''Skilling's figure'', is a degenerate uniform star polyhedron. It was proven in 1970 that there are only 75 uniform polyhedra other than the infinite families of prisms and antipr ...
that isn't Wythoff-constructible. This conversion table from Wythoff symbol to vertex configuration fails for the exceptional five polyhedra listed above whose densities do not match the densities of their generating Schwarz triangle tessellations. In these cases the vertex figure is highly distorted to achieve uniformity with flat faces: in the first two cases it is an obtuse triangle instead of an acute triangle, and in the last three it is a pentagram or hexagram instead of a pentagon or hexagon, winding around the centre twice. This results in some faces being pushed right through the polyhedron when compared with the topologically equivalent forms without the vertex figure distortion and coming out retrograde on the other side.Coxeter, 1954 In the tables below, red backgrounds mark degenerate polyhedra. Green backgrounds mark the convex uniform polyhedra.


Dihedral (prismatic)

In dihedral Schwarz triangles, two of the numbers are 2, and the third may be any
rational number In mathematics, a rational number is a number that can be expressed as the quotient or fraction of two integers, a numerator and a non-zero denominator . For example, is a rational number, as is every integer (for example, The set of all ...
strictly greater than 1. #(2 2 ''n''/''d'') – degenerate if gcd(''n'', ''d'') > 1. Many of the polyhedra with dihedral symmetry have
digon In geometry, a bigon, digon, or a ''2''-gon, is a polygon with two sides (edge (geometry), edges) and two Vertex (geometry), vertices. Its construction is Degeneracy (mathematics), degenerate in a Euclidean plane because either the two sides wou ...
faces that make them degenerate polyhedra (e.g.
dihedra A dihedron (pl. dihedra) is a type of polyhedron, made of two polygon faces which share the same set of ''n'' edges. In three-dimensional Euclidean space, it is degenerate if its faces are flat, while in three-dimensional spherical space, a dih ...
and
hosohedra In spherical geometry, an -gonal hosohedron is a tessellation of lunes on a spherical surface, such that each lune shares the same two polar opposite vertices. A regular -gonal hosohedron has Schläfli symbol with each spherical lune hav ...
). Columns of the table that only give degenerate uniform polyhedra are not included: special degenerate cases (only in the (2 2 2) Schwarz triangle) are marked with a large cross. Uniform crossed antiprisms with a base where ''p'' < 3/2 cannot exist as their
vertex figure In geometry, a vertex figure, broadly speaking, is the figure exposed when a corner of a general -polytope is sliced off. Definitions Take some corner or Vertex (geometry), vertex of a polyhedron. Mark a point somewhere along each connected ed ...
s would violate the triangular inequality; these are also marked with a large cross. The 3/2-crossed antiprism (trirp) is degenerate, being flat in Euclidean space, and is also marked with a large cross. The Schwarz triangles (2 2 ''n''/''d'') are listed here only when gcd(''n'', ''d'') = 1, as they otherwise result in only degenerate uniform polyhedra. The list below gives all possible cases where ''n'' ≤ 6.


Tetrahedral

In tetrahedral Schwarz triangles, the maximum numerator allowed is 3.


Octahedral

In octahedral Schwarz triangles, the maximum numerator allowed is 4. There also exist octahedral Schwarz triangles which use 4/2 as a number, but these only lead to degenerate uniform polyhedra as 4 and 2 have a common
factor Factor (Latin, ) may refer to: Commerce * Factor (agent), a person who acts for, notably a mercantile and colonial agent * Factor (Scotland), a person or firm managing a Scottish estate * Factors of production, such a factor is a resource used ...
.


Icosahedral

In icosahedral Schwarz triangles, the maximum numerator allowed is 5. Additionally, the numerator 4 cannot be used at all in icosahedral Schwarz triangles, although numerators 2 and 3 are allowed. (If 4 and 5 could occur together in some Schwarz triangle, they would have to do so in some Möbius triangle as well; but this is impossible as (2 4 5) is a hyperbolic triangle, not a spherical one.)


Non-Wythoffian


Hemi forms

Apart from the
octahemioctahedron In geometry, the octahemioctahedron or allelotetratetrahedron is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed as . It has 12 faces (8 triangles and 4 hexagons), 24 edges and 12 vertices. Its vertex figure is a crossed quadrilateral. It is one o ...
, the
hemipolyhedra In geometry, a hemipolyhedron is a uniform star polyhedron some of whose faces pass through its center. These "hemi" faces lie parallel to the faces of some other symmetrical polyhedron, and their count is half the number of faces of that other p ...
are generated as double coverings by the Wythoff construction.


Reduced forms

These polyhedra are generated with extra faces by the Wythoff construction. The
tetrahemihexahedron In geometry, the tetrahemihexahedron or hemicuboctahedron is a uniform star polyhedron, indexed as U4. It has 7 faces (4 triangles and 3 squares), 12 edges, and 6 vertices. Its vertex figure is a crossed quadrilateral. Its Coxeter–Dynkin diag ...
(thah, U4) is also a reduced version of the -
cupola In architecture, a cupola () is a relatively small, usually dome-like structure on top of a building often crowning a larger roof or dome. Cupolas often serve as a roof lantern to admit light and air or as a lookout. The word derives, via Ital ...
(retrograde triangular cupola, ratricu) by . As such it may also be called the ''crossed triangular cuploid''. Many cases above are derived from degenerate omnitruncated polyhedra p q r . In these cases, two distinct degenerate cases p q r and p q s can be generated from the same p and q; the result has faces 's, 's, and coinciding 's or 's respectively. These both yield the same nondegenerate uniform polyhedra when the coinciding faces are discarded, which Coxeter symbolised p q . These cases are listed below: In the small and great rhombihexahedra, the fraction 4/2 is used despite it not being in lowest terms. While 2 4 2 and 2 4/3 2 represent a single octagonal or octagrammic prism respectively, 2 4 4/2 and 2 4/3 4/2 represent three such prisms, which share some of their square faces (precisely those doubled up to produce 's). These 's appear with fourfold and not twofold rotational symmetry, justifying the use of 4/2 instead of 2.


Other forms

These two uniform polyhedra cannot be generated at all by the Wythoff construction. This is the set of uniform polyhedra commonly described as the "non-Wythoffians". Instead of the
triangular A triangle is a polygon with three corners and three sides, one of the basic shapes in geometry. The corners, also called ''vertices'', are zero-dimensional points while the sides connecting them, also called ''edges'', are one-dimensional ...
fundamental domains of the Wythoffian uniform polyhedra, these two polyhedra have
tetragon In geometry a quadrilateral is a four-sided polygon, having four edges (sides) and four corners (vertices). The word is derived from the Latin words ''quadri'', a variant of four, and ''latus'', meaning "side". It is also called a tetragon, ...
al fundamental domains. Skilling's figure is not given an index in Maeder's list due to it being an ''exotic'' uniform polyhedron, with
ridges A ridge is a long, narrow, elevated geomorphologic landform, structural feature, or a combination of both separated from the surrounding terrain by steep sides. The sides of a ridge slope away from a narrow top, the crest or ridgecrest, wi ...
(edges in the 3D case) completely coincident. This is also true of some of the degenerate polyhedron included in the above list, such as the
small complex icosidodecahedron In geometry, the small complex icosidodecahedron is a degenerate uniform star polyhedron. Its edges are doubled, making it degenerate. The star has 32 faces (20 triangles and 12 pentagons), 60 (doubled) edges and 12 vertices and 4 sharing faces. T ...
. This interpretation of edges being coincident allows these figures to have two faces per edge: not doubling the edges would give them 4, 6, 8, 10 or 12 faces meeting at an edge, figures that are usually excluded as uniform polyhedra. Skilling's figure has 4 faces meeting at some edges. Both of these special polyhedra may be derived from the
great snub dodecicosidodecahedron Great may refer to: Descriptions or measurements * Great, a relative measurement in physical space, see Size * Greatness, being divine, majestic, superior, majestic, or transcendent People * List of people known as "the Great" * Artel Great (bo ...
, 3 5/3 5/2 (U64). This is a chiral snub polyhedron, but its pentagrams appear in coplanar pairs. Combining one copy of this polyhedron with its enantiomorph, the pentagrams coincide and may be removed. As the edges of this polyhedron's vertex figure include three sides of a square, with the fourth side being contributed by its enantiomorph, we see that the resulting polyhedron is in fact the
compound of twenty octahedra The compound of twenty octahedra is a uniform polyhedron compound. It's composed of a symmetric arrangement of 20 octahedra (considered as triangular antiprisms). It is a special case of the compound of 20 octahedra with rotational freedom, in w ...
. Each of these octahedra contain one pair of parallel faces that stem from a fully symmetric triangle of 3 5/3 5/2, while the other three come from the original 3 5/3 5/2's snub triangles. Additionally, each octahedron can be replaced by the
tetrahemihexahedron In geometry, the tetrahemihexahedron or hemicuboctahedron is a uniform star polyhedron, indexed as U4. It has 7 faces (4 triangles and 3 squares), 12 edges, and 6 vertices. Its vertex figure is a crossed quadrilateral. Its Coxeter–Dynkin diag ...
with the same edges and vertices. Taking the fully symmetric triangles in the octahedra, the original coinciding pentagrams in the great snub dodecicosidodecahedra, and the equatorial squares of the tetrahemihexahedra together yields the great dirhombicosidodecahedron (Miller's monster). Taking the snub triangles of the octahedra instead yields the great disnub dirhombidodecahedron (Skilling's figure).


Euclidean tilings

The only ''plane'' triangles that tile the plane once over are (3 3 3), (4 2 4), and (3 2 6): they are respectively the equilateral triangle, the 45-45-90 right isosceles triangle, and the 30-60-90 right triangle. It follows that any plane triangle tiling the plane multiple times must be built up from multiple copies of one of these. The only possibility is the 30-30-120 obtuse isosceles triangle (3/2 6 6) = (6 2 3) + (2 6 3) tiling the plane twice over. Each triangle counts twice with opposite orientations, with a branch point at the 120° vertices. The tiling made from two apeirogons is not accepted, because its faces meet at more than one edge. Here ∞' denotes the retrograde counterpart to ∞. The degenerate named forms are: *chatit: compound of 3 hexagonal tilings + triangular tiling *chata: compound of 3 hexagonal tilings + triangular tiling + double covers of apeirogons along all edge sequences *cha: compound of 3 hexagonal tilings + double covers of apeirogons along all edge sequences *cosa: square tiling + double covers of apeirogons along all edge sequences The tiling 6 6/5 , ∞ is generated as a double cover by Wythoff's construction: Also there are a few tilings with the mixed symbol p q , : There are also some non-Wythoffian tilings: The set of uniform tilings of the plane is not proved to be complete, unlike the set of uniform polyhedra. The tilings above represent all found by Coxeter, Longuet-Higgins, and Miller in their 1954 paper on uniform polyhedra. They conjectured that the lists were complete: this was proven by Sopov in 1970 for the uniform polyhedra, but has not been proven for the uniform tilings. Indeed
Branko Grünbaum Branko Grünbaum (; 2 October 1929 – 14 September 2018) was a Croatian-born mathematician of Jewish descentJ. C. P. Miller Jeffrey Charles Percy Miller (31 August 1906 – 24 April 1981) was an English mathematician and computing pioneer. He worked in number theory and on geometry, particularly polyhedra, where Miller's monster is a nickname of the great dirhombic ...
, and G. C. Shephard list fifteen more non-Wythoffian uniform tilings in ''Uniform Tilings with Hollow Tiles'' (1981). (In two cases the same vertex figure results in two distinct tilings.) There are two tilings each for the vertex figures 4.8.4/3.8.4/3.∞ and 4.8/3.4.8/3.4/3.∞; they use the same sets of vertices and edges, but have a different set of squares. There exists also a third tiling for each of these two vertex figure that is only pseudo-uniform (all vertices look alike, but they come in two symmetry orbits). Hence, for Euclidean tilings, the vertex configuration does not uniquely determine the tiling. In the pictures below, the included squares with horizontal and vertical edges are marked with a central dot. A single square has edges highlighted. Grünbaum ambiguous tilings 1.png, Uniform (
wallpaper group A wallpaper group (or plane symmetry group or plane crystallographic group) is a mathematical classification of a two-dimensional repetitive pattern, based on the symmetry, symmetries in the pattern. Such patterns occur frequently in architecture a ...
p4m) Grünbaum ambiguous tilings 2.png, Uniform (wallpaper group p4g) Grünbaum ambiguous tilings 3.png, Pseudo-uniform
Grünbaum, Miller, and Shephard also list 33 uniform tilings using zigzags (skew apeirogons) as faces, ten of which are families that have a free parameter (the angle of the zigzag). In eight cases this parameter is continuous; in two, it is discrete.


Hyperbolic tilings

The set of triangles tiling the hyperbolic plane is infinite. Moreover in hyperbolic space the fundamental domain does not have to be a simplex. Consequently a full listing of the uniform tilings of the hyperbolic plane cannot be given. Even when restricted to convex tiles, it is possible to find multiple tilings with the same vertex configuration: see for example Snub order-6 square tiling#Related polyhedra and tiling.Semi-regular tilings of the hyperbolic plane
Basudeb Datta and Subhojoy Gupta
A few small convex cases (not involving ideal faces or vertices) have been given below:


References



*{{Cite journal , last1=Skilling , first1=J. , title=The complete set of uniform polyhedra , year=1974 , journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences , issn=1364-503X , volume=278 , issue=1278 , pages=111–135 , publisher=The Royal Society , doi=10.1098/rsta.1975.0022 , bibcode=1975RSPTA.278..111S , s2cid=122634260 }

Richard Klitzing: Polyhedra by
point-group symmetry
*Schwarz triangle

The tables are based on those presented by Klitzing at his site.
Uniform Euclidean Tesselations


External links



(Jim McNeill)
Uniform Solution for Uniform Polyhedra
(Zvi Har'El)

(Hironori Sakamoto) Uniform polyhedra Uniform tilings