120-cell
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In
geometry Geometry (; ) is a branch of mathematics concerned with properties of space such as the distance, shape, size, and relative position of figures. Geometry is, along with arithmetic, one of the oldest branches of mathematics. A mathematician w ...
, the 120-cell is the
convex regular 4-polytope In mathematics, a regular 4-polytope or regular polychoron is a regular four-dimensional polytope. They are the four-dimensional analogues of the regular polyhedra in three dimensions and the regular polygons in two dimensions. There are six co ...
(four-dimensional analogue of a
Platonic solid In geometry, a Platonic solid is a Convex polytope, convex, regular polyhedron in three-dimensional space, three-dimensional Euclidean space. Being a regular polyhedron means that the face (geometry), faces are congruence (geometry), congruent (id ...
) with
Schläfli symbol In geometry, the Schläfli symbol is a notation of the form \ that defines List of regular polytopes and compounds, regular polytopes and tessellations. The Schläfli symbol is named after the 19th-century Swiss mathematician Ludwig Schläfli, wh ...
. It is also called a C120, dodecaplex (short for "dodecahedral complex"), hyperdodecahedron, polydodecahedron, hecatonicosachoron, dodecacontachoron and hecatonicosahedroid. The boundary of the 120-cell is composed of 120 dodecahedral cells with 4 meeting at each vertex. Together they form 720
pentagon In geometry, a pentagon () is any five-sided polygon or 5-gon. The sum of the internal angles in a simple polygon, simple pentagon is 540°. A pentagon may be simple or list of self-intersecting polygons, self-intersecting. A self-intersecting ...
al faces, 1200 edges, and 600 vertices. It is the 4- dimensional analogue of the
regular dodecahedron A regular dodecahedron or pentagonal dodecahedronStrictly speaking, a pentagonal dodecahedron need not be composed of regular pentagons. The name "pentagonal dodecahedron" therefore covers a wider class of solids than just the Platonic solid, the ...
, since just as a dodecahedron has 12 pentagonal facets, with 3 around each vertex, the ''dodecaplex'' has 120 dodecahedral facets, with 3 around each edge. Its dual polytope is the
600-cell In geometry, the 600-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also known as the C600, hexacosichoron and hexacosihedroid. It is also called a tetraplex (abbreviated from ...
.


Geometry

The 120-cell incorporates the geometries of every convex regular polytope in the first four dimensions (except the polygons and above). As the sixth and largest regular convex 4-polytope, it contains inscribed instances of its four predecessors (recursively). It also contains 120 inscribed instances of the first in the sequence, the
5-cell In geometry, the 5-cell is the convex 4-polytope with Schläfli symbol . It is a 5-vertex four-dimensional space, four-dimensional object bounded by five tetrahedral cells. It is also known as a C5, hypertetrahedron, pentachoron, pentatope, pe ...
, which is not found in any of the others. The 120-cell is a four-dimensional Swiss Army knife: it contains one of everything. It is daunting but instructive to study the 120-cell, because it contains examples of ''every'' relationship among ''all'' the convex regular polytopes found in the first four dimensions. Conversely, it can only be understood by first understanding each of its predecessors, and the sequence of increasingly complex symmetries they exhibit. That is why Stillwell titled his paper on the 4-polytopes and the history of mathematics of more than 3 dimensions ''The Story of the 120-cell''.


Cartesian coordinates

Natural Cartesian coordinates for a 4-polytope centered at the origin of 4-space occur in different frames of reference, depending on the long radius (center-to-vertex) chosen.


√8 radius coordinates

The 120-cell with long radius = 2 ≈ 2.828 has edge length 4−2φ = 3− ≈ 0.764. In this frame of reference, its 600 vertex coordinates are the and of the following: where φ (also called 𝝉) is the
golden ratio In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the same as the ratio of their summation, sum to the larger of the two quantities. Expressed algebraically, for quantities and with , is in a golden ratio to if \fr ...
, ≈ 1.618.


Unit radius coordinates

The unit-radius 120-cell has edge length ≈ 0.270. In this frame of reference the 120-cell lies vertex up in standard orientation, and its coordinates are the and in the left column below: The table gives the coordinates of at least one instance of each 4-polytope, but the 120-cell contains multiples-of-five inscribed instances of each of its precursor 4-polytopes, occupying different subsets of its vertices. The (600-point) 120-cell is the convex hull of 5 disjoint (120-point) 600-cells. Each (120-point) 600-cell is the convex hull of 5 disjoint (24-point) 24-cells, so the 120-cell is the convex hull of 25 disjoint 24-cells. Each 24-cell is the convex hull of 3 disjoint (8-point) 16-cells, so the 120-cell is the convex hull of 75 disjoint 16-cells. Uniquely, the (600-point) 120-cell is the convex hull of 120 disjoint (5-point) 5-cells.


Chords

The 600-point 120-cell has all 8 of the 120-point 600-cell's distinct chord lengths, plus two additional important chords: its own shorter edges, and the edges of its 120 inscribed regular 5-cells. These two additional chords give the 120-cell its characteristic isoclinic rotation, in addition to all the rotations of the other regular 4-polytopes which it inherits. They also give the 120-cell a characteristic great circle polygon: an ''irregular'' great hexagon in which three 120-cell edges alternate with three 5-cell edges. The 120-cell's edges do not form regular great circle polygons in a single central plane the way the edges of the 600-cell, 24-cell, and 16-cell do. Like the edges of the
5-cell In geometry, the 5-cell is the convex 4-polytope with Schläfli symbol . It is a 5-vertex four-dimensional space, four-dimensional object bounded by five tetrahedral cells. It is also known as a C5, hypertetrahedron, pentachoron, pentatope, pe ...
and the 8-cell tesseract, they form zig-zag
Petrie polygon In geometry, a Petrie polygon for a regular polytope of dimensions is a skew polygon in which every consecutive sides (but no ) belongs to one of the facets. The Petrie polygon of a regular polygon is the regular polygon itself; that of a reg ...
s instead. The 120-cell's Petrie polygon is a
triacontagon In geometry, a triacontagon or 30-gon is a thirty-sided polygon. The sum of any triacontagon's interior angles is 5040 (number), 5040 degrees. Regular triacontagon The ''regular polygon, regular triacontagon'' is a constructible polygon, by an ...
zig-zag
skew polygon In geometry, a skew polygon is a closed polygonal chain in Euclidean space. It is a figure (geometry), figure similar to a polygon except its Vertex (geometry), vertices are not all coplanarity, coplanar. While a polygon is ordinarily defined a ...
. Since the 120-cell has a circumference of 30 edges, it has 15 distinct chord lengths, ranging from its edge length to its diameter. Every regular convex 4-polytope is inscribed in the 120-cell, and the 15 chords enumerated in the rows of the following table are all the distinct chords that make up the regular 4-polytopes and their great circle polygons. The first thing to notice about this table is that it has eight columns, not six; in addition to the six regular convex 4-polytopes, two irregular 4-polytopes occur naturally in the sequence of nested 4-polytopes: the 96-point
snub 24-cell In geometry, the snub 24-cell or snub disicositetrachoron is a convex uniform 4-polytope composed of 120 regular Tetrahedron, tetrahedral and 24 Regular icosahedron, icosahedral cell (mathematics), cells. Five tetrahedra and three icosahedra meet ...
and the 480-point diminished 120-cell. The second thing to notice is that each numbered row (each chord) is marked with a triangle , square ☐, phi symbol 𝜙 or pentagram ✩. The 15 chords form polygons of four kinds: great squares ☐ characteristic of the 16-cell, great hexagons and great triangles △ characteristic of the 24-cell, great decagons and great pentagons 𝜙 characteristic of the 600-cell, and skew pentagrams ✩ or decagrams characteristic of the 5-cell which are Petrie polygons that circle through a set of central planes and form face polygons but not great polygons. =15 , rowspan=2, 2 , 𝝅 , colspan=2,
diameter In geometry, a diameter of a circle is any straight line segment that passes through the centre of the circle and whose endpoints lie on the circle. It can also be defined as the longest Chord (geometry), chord of the circle. Both definitions a ...
, rowspan=2, , rowspan=2,
4 , rowspan=2,
8 , rowspan=2,
12 , rowspan=2,
48 , rowspan=2,
60 , rowspan=2,
240 , rowspan=2,
300 , rowspan=2,

, - style="background: paleturquoise;", , 180° , , 2 , - !colspan=6, Squared lengths total , style="background: seashell;", 25 , style="background: paleturquoise;", 64 , style="background: paleturquoise;", 256 , style="background: paleturquoise;", 576 , style="background: yellow;", , style="background: yellow;", 14400 , style="background: seashell;", , style="background: seashell;", 360000 ! The annotated chord table is a complete
bill of materials A bill of materials or product structure (sometimes bill of material, BOM or associated list) is a list of the raw materials, sub-assemblies, intermediate assemblies, sub-components, parts, and the quantities of each needed to manufacture an Prod ...
for constructing the 120-cell. All of the 2-polytopes, 3-polytopes and 4-polytopes in the 120-cell are made from the 15 1-polytopes in the table. The black integers in table cells are incidence counts of the row's chord in the column's 4-polytope. For example, in the #3 chord row, the 600-cell's 72 great decagons contain 720 #3 chords in all. The integers are the number of disjoint 4-polytopes above (the column label) which compounded form a 120-cell. For example, the 120-cell is a compound of disjoint 24-cells (25 * 24 vertices = 600 vertices). The integers are the number of distinct 4-polytopes above (the column label) which can be picked out in the 120-cell. For example, the 120-cell contains distinct 24-cells which share components. The integers in the right column are incidence counts of the row's chord at each 120-cell vertex. For example, in the #3 chord row, #3 chords converge at each of the 120-cell's 600 vertices, forming a double icosahedral
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 ...
2. In total major chords of 15 distinct lengths meet at each vertex of the 120-cell.


Relationships among interior polytopes

The 120-cell is the compound of all five of the other regular convex 4-polytopes. All the relationships among the regular 1-, 2-, 3- and 4-polytopes occur in the 120-cell. It is a four-dimensional
jigsaw puzzle A jigsaw puzzle (with context, sometimes just jigsaw or just puzzle) is a tiling puzzle that requires the assembly of often irregularly shaped interlocking and mosaicked pieces. Typically each piece has a portion of a picture, which is comple ...
in which all those polytopes are the parts. Although there are many sequences in which to construct the 120-cell by putting those parts together, ultimately they only fit together one way. The 120-cell is the unique solution to the combination of all these polytopes. The regular 1-polytope occurs in only 15 distinct lengths in any of the component polytopes of the 120-cell. By
Alexandrov's uniqueness theorem Alexandrov's theorem on polyhedra is a rigidity theorem in mathematics, describing three-dimensional convex polyhedra in terms of the distances between points on their surfaces. It implies that convex polyhedra with distinct shapes from each othe ...
, convex polyhedra with shapes distinct from each other also have distinct
metric spaces In mathematics, a metric space is a set together with a notion of ''distance'' between its elements, usually called points. The distance is measured by a function called a metric or distance function. Metric spaces are a general setting for ...
of surface distances, so each regular 4-polytope has its own unique subset of these 15 chords. Only 4 of those 15 chords occur in the 16-cell, 8-cell and 24-cell. The four , , and are sufficient to build the 24-cell and all its component parts. The 24-cell is the unique solution to the combination of these 4 chords and all the regular polytopes that can be built from them. An additional 4 of the 15 chords are required to build the 600-cell. The four are square roots of irrational fractions that are functions of . The 600-cell is the unique solution to the combination of these 8 chords and all the regular polytopes that can be built from them. Notable among the new parts found in the 600-cell which do not occur in the 24-cell are pentagons, and icosahedra. All 15 chords, and 15 other distinct chordal distances enumerated below, occur in the 120-cell. Notable among the new parts found in the 120-cell which do not occur in the 600-cell are The relationships between the ''regular'' 5-cell (the
simplex In geometry, a simplex (plural: simplexes or simplices) is a generalization of the notion of a triangle or tetrahedron to arbitrary dimensions. The simplex is so-named because it represents the simplest possible polytope in any given dimension. ...
regular 4-polytope) and the other regular 4-polytopes are manifest directly only in the 120-cell. The 600-point 120-cell is a compound of 120 disjoint 5-point 5-cells, and it is also a compound of 5 disjoint 120-point 600-cells (two different ways). Each 5-cell has one vertex in each of 5 disjoint 600-cells, and therefore in each of 5 disjoint 24-cells, 5 disjoint 8-cells, and 5 disjoint 16-cells. Each 5-cell is a ring (two different ways) joining 5 disjoint instances of each of the other regular 4-polytopes.


Geodesic rectangles

The 30 distinct chords found in the 120-cell occur as 15 pairs of 180° complements. They form 15 distinct kinds of great circle polygon that lie in central planes of several kinds: in an irregular dodecagon, in a regular decagon, and in several kinds of rectangle, including a square. Each great circle polygon is characterized by its pair of 180° complementary chords. The chord pairs form great circle polygons with parallel opposing edges, so each great polygon is either a rectangle or a compound of a rectangle, with the two chords as the rectangle's edges. Each of the 15 complementary chord pairs corresponds to a distinct pair of opposing polyhedral sections of the 120-cell, beginning with a vertex, the 00 section. The correspondence is that each 120-cell vertex is surrounded by each polyhedral section's vertices at a uniform distance (the chord length), the way a polyhedron's vertices surround its center at the distance of its long radius. The #1 chord is the "radius" of the 10 section, the tetrahedral vertex figure of the 120-cell. The #14 chord is the "radius" of its congruent opposing 290 section. The #7 chord is the "radius" of the central section of the 120-cell, in which two opposing 150 sections are coincident.


Concentric hulls

These hulls illustrate sections 1 - 8 of the 120-cell beginning with a cell (hull 1). A ''section'' is a flat 3-dimensional hyperplane slice through the
3-sphere In mathematics, a hypersphere or 3-sphere is a 4-dimensional analogue of a sphere, and is the 3-dimensional n-sphere, ''n''-sphere. In 4-dimensional Euclidean space, it is the set of points equidistant from a fixed central point. The interior o ...
: a 2-sphere (ordinary sphere). It is dimensionally analogous to a flat 2-dimensional plane slice through a 2-sphere: a 1-sphere (ordinary circle). The hulls are illustrated as if they were all the same size, but actually they increase in radius as numbered: they are concentric 2-spheres that nest inside each other. Every cell of the 120-cell is the smallest hull in its own set of 8 concentric hulls. There are 120 distinct nesting sets of 8 hulls. The 120-cell actually has 15 sections beginning with a cell, numbered 1 - 15 with number 8 in the center. After increasing in size from 1 to 8, the hulls get smaller again. Sections 1 and 15 are both a hull 1, the smallest hull, a dodecahedral cell of the 120-cell. Section 8 is the central section, the largest hull, with the same radius as the 120-cell. Except for the central section 8, the sections occur in parallel pairs, on either side of the central section. Hull 8 is dimensionally analogous to the equator, while hulls 1 - 7 are dimensionally analogous to lines of latitude. There are 120 of each kind of hull 1 - 7 in the 120-cell, but only 60 of the central hull 8.


Polyhedral graph

Considering the
adjacency matrix In graph theory and computer science, an adjacency matrix is a square matrix used to represent a finite graph (discrete mathematics), graph. The elements of the matrix (mathematics), matrix indicate whether pairs of Vertex (graph theory), vertices ...
of the vertices representing the polyhedral graph of the unit-radius 120-cell, the graph diameter is 15, connecting each vertex to its coordinate-negation at a
Euclidean distance In mathematics, the Euclidean distance between two points in Euclidean space is the length of the line segment between them. It can be calculated from the Cartesian coordinates of the points using the Pythagorean theorem, and therefore is o ...
of 2 away (its circumdiameter), and there are 24 different paths to connect them along the polytope edges. From each vertex, there are 4 vertices at distance 1, 12 at distance 2, 24 at distance 3, 36 at distance 4, 52 at distance 5, 68 at distance 6, 76 at distance 7, 78 at distance 8, 72 at distance 9, 64 at distance 10, 56 at distance 11, 40 at distance 12, 12 at distance 13, 4 at distance 14, and 1 at distance 15. The adjacency matrix has 27 distinct eigenvalues ranging from ≈ 0.270, with a multiplicity of 4, to 2, with a multiplicity of 1. The multiplicity of eigenvalue 0 is 18, and the rank of the adjacency matrix is 582. The vertices of the 120-cell polyhedral graph are 3-colorable. The graph is Eulerian having degree 4 in every vertex. Its edge set can be decomposed into two Hamiltonian cycles.


Constructions

The 120-cell is the sixth in the sequence of 6 convex regular 4-polytopes (in order of size and complexity). It can be deconstructed into ten distinct instances (or five disjoint instances) of its predecessor (and dual) the
600-cell In geometry, the 600-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also known as the C600, hexacosichoron and hexacosihedroid. It is also called a tetraplex (abbreviated from ...
, just as the 600-cell can be deconstructed into twenty-five distinct instances (or five disjoint instances) of its predecessor the
24-cell In four-dimensional space, four-dimensional geometry, the 24-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also called C24, or the icositetrachoron, octaplex (short for "octa ...
, the 24-cell can be deconstructed into three distinct instances of its predecessor the
tesseract In geometry, a tesseract or 4-cube is a four-dimensional hypercube, analogous to a two-dimensional square and a three-dimensional cube. Just as the perimeter of the square consists of four edges and the surface of the cube consists of six ...
(8-cell), and the 8-cell can be deconstructed into two disjoint instances of its predecessor (and dual) the
16-cell In geometry, the 16-cell is the regular convex 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is one of the six regular convex 4-polytopes first described by the Swiss mathematician Ludwig Schläfli in the ...
. The 120-cell contains 675 distinct instances (75 disjoint instances) of the 16-cell. The reverse procedure to construct each of these from an instance of its predecessor preserves the radius of the predecessor, but generally produces a successor with a smaller edge length. The 600-cell's edge length is ~0.618 times its radius (the inverse
golden ratio In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the same as the ratio of their summation, sum to the larger of the two quantities. Expressed algebraically, for quantities and with , is in a golden ratio to if \fr ...
), but the 120-cell's edge length is ~0.270 times its radius. The 120-cell is also the convex hull of the regular compound of 120 disjoint regular 5-cells. This can be seen to be equivalent to the compound of 5 disjoint 600-cells, as follows. Beginning with a single 120-point 600-cell, expand each vertex into a regular 5-cell. For each of the 120 vertices, add 4 new equidistant vertices, such that the 5 vertices form a regular 5-cell inscribed in the 3-sphere. The 120 5-cells are disjoint, and the 600 vertices form 5 disjoint 120-point 600-cells: a 120-cell.


Dual 600-cells

Since the 120-cell is the dual of the 600-cell, it can be constructed from the 600-cell by placing its 600 vertices at the center of volume of each of the 600 tetrahedral cells. From a 600-cell of unit long radius, this results in a 120-cell of slightly smaller long radius ( ≈ 0.926) and edge length of exactly 1/4. Thus the unit edge-length 120-cell (with long radius φ2 ≈ 3.702) can be constructed in this manner just inside a 600-cell of long radius 4. The unit radius 120-cell (with edge-length ≈ 0.270) can be constructed in this manner just inside a 600-cell of long radius ≈ 1.080. Reciprocally, the unit-radius 120-cell can be constructed just outside a 600-cell of slightly smaller long radius ≈ 0.926, by placing the center of each dodecahedral cell at one of the 120 600-cell vertices. The 120-cell whose coordinates are given
above Above may refer to: *Above (artist) Tavar Zawacki (b. 1981, California) is a Polish, Portuguese - American abstract artist and internationally recognized visual artist based in Berlin, Germany. From 1996 to 2016, he created work under the ...
of long radius = 2 ≈ 2.828 and edge-length = 3− ≈ 0.764 can be constructed in this manner just outside a 600-cell of long radius φ2, which is smaller than in the same ratio of ≈ 0.926; it is in the golden ratio to the edge length of the 600-cell, so that must be φ. The 120-cell of edge-length 2 and long radius φ2 ≈ 7.405 given by Coxeter can be constructed in this manner just outside a 600-cell of long radius φ4 and edge-length φ3. Therefore, the unit-radius 120-cell can be constructed from its predecessor the unit-radius 600-cell in three reciprocation steps.


Cell rotations of inscribed duals

Since the 120-cell contains inscribed 600-cells, it contains its own dual of the same radius. The 120-cell contains five disjoint 600-cells (ten overlapping inscribed 600-cells of which we can pick out five disjoint 600-cells in two different ways), so it can be seen as a compound of five of its own dual (in two ways). The vertices of each inscribed 600-cell are vertices of the 120-cell, and (dually) each dodecahedral cell center is a tetrahedral cell center in each of the inscribed 600-cells. The dodecahedral cells of the 120-cell have tetrahedral cells of the 600-cells inscribed in them. Just as the 120-cell is a compound of five 600-cells (in two ways), the dodecahedron is a compound of five regular tetrahedra (in two ways). As two opposing tetrahedra can be inscribed in a cube, and five cubes can be inscribed in a dodecahedron, ten tetrahedra in five cubes can be inscribed in a dodecahedron: two opposing sets of five, with each set covering all 20 vertices and each vertex in two tetrahedra (one from each set, but not the opposing pair of a cube obviously). This shows that the 120-cell contains, among its many interior features, 120 compounds of ten tetrahedra, each of which is dimensionally analogous to the whole 120-cell as a compound of ten 600-cells. All ten tetrahedra can be generated by two chiral five-click rotations of any one tetrahedron. In each dodecahedral cell, one tetrahedral cell comes from each of the ten 600-cells inscribed in the 120-cell. Therefore, the whole 120-cell, with all ten inscribed 600-cells, can be generated from just one 600-cell by rotating its cells.


Augmentation

Another consequence of the 120-cell containing inscribed 600-cells is that it is possible to construct it by placing 4-pyramids of some kind on the cells of the 600-cell. These tetrahedral pyramids must be quite irregular in this case (with the apex blunted into four 'apexes'), but we can discern their shape in the way a tetrahedron lies inscribed in a
dodecahedron In geometry, a dodecahedron (; ) or duodecahedron is any polyhedron with twelve flat faces. The most familiar dodecahedron is the regular dodecahedron with regular pentagons as faces, which is a Platonic solid. There are also three Kepler–Po ...
. Only 120 tetrahedral cells of each 600-cell can be inscribed in the 120-cell's dodecahedra; its other 480 tetrahedra span dodecahedral cells. Each dodecahedron-inscribed tetrahedron is the center cell of a cluster of five tetrahedra, with the four others face-bonded around it lying only partially within the dodecahedron. The central tetrahedron is edge-bonded to an additional 12 tetrahedral cells, also lying only partially within the dodecahedron. The central cell is vertex-bonded to 40 other tetrahedral cells which lie entirely outside the dodecahedron.


Weyl orbits

Another construction method uses
quaternions In mathematics, the quaternion number system extends the complex numbers. Quaternions were first described by the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton in 1843 and applied to mechanics in three-dimensional space. The algebra of quaternion ...
and the
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 ...
of
Weyl group In mathematics, in particular the theory of Lie algebras, the Weyl group (named after Hermann Weyl) of a root system Φ is a subgroup of the isometry group of that root system. Specifically, it is the subgroup which is generated by reflections t ...
orbits O(\Lambda)=W(H_4)=I of order 120. The following describe T and T'
24-cell In four-dimensional space, four-dimensional geometry, the 24-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also called C24, or the icositetrachoron, octaplex (short for "octa ...
s as quaternion orbit weights of D4 under the Weyl group W(D4):
O(0100) : T =
O(1000) : V1
O(0010) : V2
O(0001) : V3 T'=\sqrt\ = \begin \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac \\ \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac \\ \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac & \frac \end; With quaternions (p,q) where \bar p is the conjugate of p and ,qr\rightarrow r'=prq and ,q*:r\rightarrow r''=p\bar rq, then the
Coxeter group In mathematics, a Coxeter group, named after H. S. M. Coxeter, is an abstract group that admits a formal description in terms of reflections (or kaleidoscopic mirrors). Indeed, the finite Coxeter groups are precisely the finite Euclidean ref ...
W(H_4)=\lbrace ,\bar p\oplus ,\bar p*\rbrace is the symmetry group of the
600-cell In geometry, the 600-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also known as the C600, hexacosichoron and hexacosihedroid. It is also called a tetraplex (abbreviated from ...
and the 120-cell of order 14400. Given p \in T such that \bar p=\pm p^4, \bar p^2=\pm p^3, \bar p^3=\pm p^2, \bar p^4=\pm p and p^\dagger as an exchange of -1/\varphi \leftrightarrow \varphi within p, we can construct: * the
snub 24-cell In geometry, the snub 24-cell or snub disicositetrachoron is a convex uniform 4-polytope composed of 120 regular Tetrahedron, tetrahedral and 24 Regular icosahedron, icosahedral cell (mathematics), cells. Five tetrahedra and three icosahedra meet ...
S=\sum_^4\oplus p^i T * the
600-cell In geometry, the 600-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also known as the C600, hexacosichoron and hexacosihedroid. It is also called a tetraplex (abbreviated from ...
I=T+S=\sum_^4\oplus p^i T * the 120-cell J=\sum_^4\oplus p^i\bar p^T' * the alternate snub 24-cell S'=\sum_^4\oplus p^i\bar p^T' * the dual snub 24-cell = T \oplus T' \oplus S'.


As a configuration

This configuration matrix represents the 120-cell. The rows and columns correspond to vertices, edges, faces, and cells. The diagonal numbers say how many of each element occur in the whole 120-cell. The nondiagonal numbers say how many of the column's element occur in or at the row's element. \begin\begin600 & 4 & 6 & 4 \\ 2 & 1200 & 3 & 3 \\ 5 & 5 & 720 & 2 \\ 20 & 30 & 12 & 120 \end\end Here is the configuration expanded with ''k''-face elements and ''k''-figures. The diagonal element counts are the ratio of the full
Coxeter group In mathematics, a Coxeter group, named after H. S. M. Coxeter, is an abstract group that admits a formal description in terms of reflections (or kaleidoscopic mirrors). Indeed, the finite Coxeter groups are precisely the finite Euclidean ref ...
order, 14400, divided by the order of the subgroup with mirror removal.


Visualization

The 120-cell consists of 120 dodecahedral cells. For visualization purposes, it is convenient that the dodecahedron has opposing parallel faces (a trait it shares with the cells of the
tesseract In geometry, a tesseract or 4-cube is a four-dimensional hypercube, analogous to a two-dimensional square and a three-dimensional cube. Just as the perimeter of the square consists of four edges and the surface of the cube consists of six ...
and the
24-cell In four-dimensional space, four-dimensional geometry, the 24-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also called C24, or the icositetrachoron, octaplex (short for "octa ...
). One can stack dodecahedrons face to face in a straight line bent in the 4th direction into a great circle with a circumference of 10 cells. Starting from this initial ten cell construct there are two common visualizations one can use: a layered stereographic projection, and a structure of intertwining rings (discrete
Hopf fibration In differential topology, the Hopf fibration (also known as the Hopf bundle or Hopf map) describes a 3-sphere (a hypersphere in four-dimensional space) in terms of circles and an ordinary sphere. Discovered by Heinz Hopf in 1931, it is an infl ...
).


Layered stereographic projection

The cell locations lend themselves to a hyperspherical description. Pick an arbitrary dodecahedron and label it the "north pole". Twelve great circle meridians (four cells long) radiate out in 3 dimensions, converging at the fifth "south pole" cell. This skeleton accounts for 50 of the 120 cells (2 + 4 × 12). Starting at the North Pole, we can build up the 120-cell in 9 latitudinal layers, with allusions to terrestrial 2-sphere topography in the table below. With the exception of the poles, the centroids of the cells of each layer lie on a separate 2-sphere, with the equatorial centroids lying on a great 2-sphere. The centroids of the 30 equatorial cells form the vertices of an
icosidodecahedron In geometry, an icosidodecahedron or pentagonal gyrobirotunda is a polyhedron with twenty (''icosi-'') triangular faces and twelve (''dodeca-'') pentagonal faces. An icosidodecahedron has 30 identical Vertex (geometry), vertices, with two triang ...
, with the meridians (as described above) passing through the center of each pentagonal face. The cells labeled "interstitial" in the following table do not fall on meridian great circles. The cells of layers 2, 4, 6 and 8 are located over the faces of the pole cell. The cells of layers 3 and 7 are located directly over the vertices of the pole cell. The cells of layer 5 are located over the edges of the pole cell.


Intertwining rings

The 120-cell can be partitioned into 12 disjoint 10-cell great circle rings, forming a discrete/quantized
Hopf fibration In differential topology, the Hopf fibration (also known as the Hopf bundle or Hopf map) describes a 3-sphere (a hypersphere in four-dimensional space) in terms of circles and an ordinary sphere. Discovered by Heinz Hopf in 1931, it is an infl ...
.{{Sfn, Banchoff, 2013}{{Failed verification, date=March 2025, reason=Banchoff 2013 describes the decomposition of the 8-cell and 24-cell into tori, but does not discuss the 120-cell.{{Sfn, Zamboj, 2021, pp=6-12, loc=§2 Mathematical background{{Sfn, Sullivan, 1991, loc=Other Properties of the 120-cell, p=15 Starting with one 10-cell ring, one can place another ring alongside it that spirals around the original ring one complete revolution in ten cells. Five such 10-cell rings can be placed adjacent to the original 10-cell ring. Although the outer rings "spiral" around the inner ring (and each other), they actually have no helical torsion. They are all equivalent. The spiraling is a result of the 3-sphere curvature. The inner ring and the five outer rings now form a six ring, 60-cell solid torus. One can continue adding 10-cell rings adjacent to the previous ones, but it's more instructive to construct a second torus, disjoint from the one above, from the remaining 60 cells, that interlocks with the first. The 120-cell, like the 3-sphere, is the union of these two ( Clifford) tori. If the center ring of the first torus is a meridian great circle as defined above, the center ring of the second torus is the equatorial great circle that is centered on the meridian circle.{{Sfn, Zamboj, 2021, loc=§5 Hopf tori corresponding to circles on B2, pp=23-29 Also note that the spiraling shell of 50 cells around a center ring can be either left handed or right handed. It's just a matter of partitioning the cells in the shell differently, i.e. picking another set of disjoint (
Clifford parallel In elliptic geometry, two lines are Clifford parallel or paratactic lines if the perpendicular distance between them is constant from point to point. The concept was first studied by William Kingdon Clifford in elliptic space and appears only in ...
) great circles.


Other great circle constructs

There is another great circle path of interest that alternately passes through opposing cell vertices, then along an edge. This path consists of 6 edges alternating with 6 cell diameter
chords Chord or chords may refer to: Art and music * Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously ** Guitar chord, a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning * The Chords (British band), 1970s British mod ...
, forming an irregular dodecagon in a central plane.{{Efn, The 120-cell has an irregular dodecagon {12} great circle polygon of 6 edges (#1
chords Chord or chords may refer to: Art and music * Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously ** Guitar chord, a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning * The Chords (British band), 1970s British mod ...
marked {{Color, red, 𝜁) alternating with 6 dodecahedron cell-diameters ({{Color, magenta, #4 chords).{{Efn, name=dodecahedral cell metrics The irregular great dodecagon contains two irregular great hexagons ({{color, red, red) inscribed in alternate positions.{{Efn, name=irregular great hexagon Two ''regular'' great hexagons with edges of a third size ({{radic, 1, the #5 chord) are also inscribed in the dodecagon.{{Efn, name=great hexagon The twelve regular hexagon edges (#5 chords), the six cell-diameter edges of the dodecagon (#4 chords), and the six 120-cell edges of the dodecagon (#1 chords), are all chords of the same great circle, but the other 24 zig-zag edges (#1 chords, not shown) that bridge the six #4 edges of the dodecagon do not lie in this great circle plane. The 120-cell's irregular great dodecagon planes, its irregular great hexagon planes, its regular great hexagon planes, and its equilateral great triangle planes, are the same set of dodecagon planes. The 120-cell contains 200 such {12} central planes (100 completely orthogonal pairs), the ''same'' 200 central planes each containing a
hexagon In geometry, a hexagon (from Greek , , meaning "six", and , , meaning "corner, angle") is a six-sided polygon. The total of the internal angles of any simple (non-self-intersecting) hexagon is 720°. Regular hexagon A regular hexagon is de ...
that are found in each of the 10 inscribed 600-cells.{{Efn, The 120-cell contains ten 600-cells which can be partitioned into five completely disjoint 600-cells two different ways.{{Efn, name=2 ways to get 5 disjoint 600-cells All ten 600-cells occupy the same set of 200 irregular great dodecagon central planes.{{Efn, name=irregular great dodecagon There are exactly 400 regular hexagons in the 120-cell (two in each dodecagon central plane), and each of the ten 600-cells contains its own distinct subset of 200 of them (one from each dodecagon central plane). Each 600-cell contains only one of the two opposing regular hexagons inscribed in any dodecagon central plane, just as it contains only one of two opposing tetrahedra inscribed in any dodecahedral cell. Each 600-cell is disjoint from 4 other 600-cells, and shares hexagons with 5 other 600-cells.{{Efn, Each regular great hexagon is shared by two 24-cells in the same 600-cell,{{Efn, 1=A 24-cell contains 16 hexagons. In the 600-cell, with 25 24-cells, each 24-cell is disjoint from 8 24-cells and intersects each of the other 16 24-cells in six vertices that form a hexagon.{{Sfn, Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, 2020, p=438 A 600-cell contains 25・16/2 = 200 such hexagons., name=disjoint from 8 and intersects 16 and each 24-cell is shared by two 600-cells.{{Efn, name=two 600-cells share a 24-cell Each regular hexagon is shared by four 600-cells., name=hexagons 24-cells and 600-cells Each disjoint pair of 600-cells occupies the opposing pair of disjoint great hexagons in every dodecagon central plane. Each non-disjoint pair of 600-cells intersects in 16 hexagons that comprise a 24-cell. The 120-cell contains 9 times as many distinct 24-cells (225) as disjoint 24-cells (25).{{Efn, name=rays and bases Each 24-cell occurs in 9 600-cells, is absent from just one 600-cell, and is shared by two 600-cells., name=same 200 planes, name=irregular great dodecagon Both these great circle paths have dual great circle paths in the 600-cell. The 10 cell face to face path above maps to a 10 vertex path solely traversing along edges in the 600-cell, forming a
decagon In geometry, a decagon (from the Greek δέκα ''déka'' and γωνία ''gonía,'' "ten angles") is a ten-sided polygon or 10-gon.. The total sum of the interior angles of a simple decagon is 1440°. Regular decagon A '' regular decagon'' has a ...
.{{Efn, name=two coaxial Petrie 30-gons The alternating cell/edge path maps to a path consisting of 12 tetrahedrons alternately meeting face to face then vertex to vertex (six triangular bipyramids) in the 600-cell. This latter path corresponds to a ring of six icosahedra meeting face to face in the
snub 24-cell In geometry, the snub 24-cell or snub disicositetrachoron is a convex uniform 4-polytope composed of 120 regular Tetrahedron, tetrahedral and 24 Regular icosahedron, icosahedral cell (mathematics), cells. Five tetrahedra and three icosahedra meet ...
(or icosahedral pyramids in the 600-cell), forming a
hexagon In geometry, a hexagon (from Greek , , meaning "six", and , , meaning "corner, angle") is a six-sided polygon. The total of the internal angles of any simple (non-self-intersecting) hexagon is 720°. Regular hexagon A regular hexagon is de ...
. Another great circle polygon path exists which is unique to the 120-cell and has no dual counterpart in the 600-cell. This path consists of 3 120-cell edges alternating with 3 inscribed 5-cell edges (#8 chords), forming the irregular great hexagon with alternating short and long edges illustrated above.{{Efn, name=irregular great hexagon Each 5-cell edge runs through the volume of three dodecahedral cells (in a ring of ten face-bonded dodecahedral cells), to the opposite pentagonal face of the third dodecahedron. This irregular great hexagon lies in the same central plane (on the same great circle) as the irregular great dodecagon described above, but it intersects only {6} of the {12} dodecagon vertices. There are two irregular great hexagons inscribed in each irregular great dodecagon, in alternate positions.{{Efn, name=irregular great dodecagon


Perspective projections

{, class="wikitable" !colspan=2, Projections to 3D of a 4D 120-cell performing a simple rotation , - , align=center, , align=center, , - , From outside the
3-sphere In mathematics, a hypersphere or 3-sphere is a 4-dimensional analogue of a sphere, and is the 3-dimensional n-sphere, ''n''-sphere. In 4-dimensional Euclidean space, it is the set of points equidistant from a fixed central point. The interior o ...
in 4-space. , Inside the 3D surface of the 3-sphere. As in all the illustrations in this article, only the edges of the 120-cell appear in these renderings. All the other
chords Chord or chords may refer to: Art and music * Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously ** Guitar chord, a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning * The Chords (British band), 1970s British mod ...
are not shown. The complex interior parts of the 120-cell, all its inscribed 600-cells, 24-cells, 8-cells, 16-cells and 5-cells, are completely invisible in all illustrations. The viewer must imagine them. These projections use
perspective projection Linear or point-projection perspective () is one of two types of graphical projection perspective in the graphic arts; the other is parallel projection. Linear perspective is an approximate representation, generally on a flat surface, of ...
, from a specific viewpoint in four dimensions, projecting the model as a 3D shadow. Therefore, faces and cells that look larger are merely closer to the 4D viewpoint. A comparison of perspective projections of the 3D dodecahedron to 2D (below left), and projections of the 4D 120-cell to 3D (below right), demonstrates two related perspective projection methods, by dimensional analogy.
Schlegel diagram In geometry, a Schlegel diagram is a projection of a polytope from \mathbb^d into \mathbb^ through a point just outside one of its facets. The resulting entity is a polytopal subdivision of the facet in \mathbb^ that, together with the ori ...
s use perspective to show depth in the dimension which has been flattened, choosing a view point ''above'' a specific cell, thus making that cell the envelope of the model, with other cells appearing smaller inside it.
Stereographic projection In mathematics, a stereographic projection is a perspective transform, perspective projection of the sphere, through a specific point (geometry), point on the sphere (the ''pole'' or ''center of projection''), onto a plane (geometry), plane (th ...
s use the same approach, but are shown with curved edges, representing the spherical polytope as a tiling of a
3-sphere In mathematics, a hypersphere or 3-sphere is a 4-dimensional analogue of a sphere, and is the 3-dimensional n-sphere, ''n''-sphere. In 4-dimensional Euclidean space, it is the set of points equidistant from a fixed central point. The interior o ...
. Both these methods distort the object, because the cells are not actually nested inside each other (they meet face-to-face), and they are all the same size. Other perspective projection methods exist, such as the rotating animations above, which do not exhibit this particular kind of distortion, but rather some other kind of distortion (as all projections must). {, class="wikitable" style="width:540px;" , +Comparison with regular dodecahedron , - !width=80, Projection !
Dodecahedron In geometry, a dodecahedron (; ) or duodecahedron is any polyhedron with twelve flat faces. The most familiar dodecahedron is the regular dodecahedron with regular pentagons as faces, which is a Platonic solid. There are also three Kepler–Po ...
!120-cell , - !
Schlegel diagram In geometry, a Schlegel diagram is a projection of a polytope from \mathbb^d into \mathbb^ through a point just outside one of its facets. The resulting entity is a polytopal subdivision of the facet in \mathbb^ that, together with the ori ...
, align=center,
12 pentagon faces in the plane , align=center,
120 dodecahedral cells in 3-space , - !
Stereographic projection In mathematics, a stereographic projection is a perspective transform, perspective projection of the sphere, through a specific point (geometry), point on the sphere (the ''pole'' or ''center of projection''), onto a plane (geometry), plane (th ...
, align=center, , align=center,
With transparent faces {, class="wikitable" , - !colspan=2, Enhanced perspective projections , - , align=center, , Cell-first perspective projection at 5 times the distance from the center to a vertex, with these enhancements applied: * Nearest dodecahedron to the 4D viewpoint rendered in yellow * The 12 dodecahedra immediately adjoining it rendered in cyan; * The remaining dodecahedra rendered in green; * Cells facing away from the 4D viewpoint (those lying on the "far side" of the 120-cell) culled to minimize clutter in the final image. , - , align=center, , Vertex-first perspective projection at 5 times the distance from center to a vertex, with these enhancements: * Four cells surrounding nearest vertex shown in 4 colors * Nearest vertex shown in white (center of image where 4 cells meet) * Remaining cells shown in transparent green * Cells facing away from 4D viewpoint culled for clarity


Orthogonal projections

Orthogonal projection In linear algebra and functional analysis, a projection is a linear transformation P from a vector space to itself (an endomorphism) such that P\circ P=P. That is, whenever P is applied twice to any vector, it gives the same result as if it we ...
s of the 120-cell can be done in 2D by defining two orthonormal basis vectors for a specific view direction. The 30-gonal projection was made in 1963 by B. L. Chilton.{{Sfn, Chilton, 1964 The H3
decagon In geometry, a decagon (from the Greek δέκα ''déka'' and γωνία ''gonía,'' "ten angles") is a ten-sided polygon or 10-gon.. The total sum of the interior angles of a simple decagon is 1440°. Regular decagon A '' regular decagon'' has a ...
al projection shows the plane of the van Oss polygon. {, class="wikitable" , +
Orthographic projection Orthographic projection (also orthogonal projection and analemma) is a means of representing Three-dimensional space, three-dimensional objects in Plane (mathematics), two dimensions. Orthographic projection is a form of parallel projection in ...
s by Coxeter planes{{Sfn, Dechant, 2021, pp=18-20, loc=6. The Coxeter Plane , - align=center !H4 ! - !F4 , - align=center ,
0br>(Red=1) ,
0br>(Red=1) ,
2br>(Red=1) , - align=center !H3 !A2 / B3 / D4 !A3 / B2 , - align=center ,
0br>(Red=5, orange=10) ,
br>(Red=1, orange=3, yellow=6, lime=9, green=12) ,
br>(Red=1, orange=2, yellow=4, lime=6, green=8) 3-dimensional orthogonal projections can also be made with three orthonormal basis vectors, and displayed as a 3d model, and then projecting a certain perspective in 3D for a 2d image. {, class="wikitable" style="width:540px;" , +3D orthographic projections ,
3D isometric projection , align=center,
Animated 4D rotation


Related polyhedra and honeycombs


H4 polytopes

The 120-cell is one of 15 regular and uniform polytopes with the same H4 symmetry ,3,5{{Sfn, Denney, Hooker, Johnson, Robinson, 2020 {{H4_family


{p,3,3} polytopes

The 120-cell is similar to three
regular 4-polytopes In mathematics, a regular 4-polytope or regular polychoron is a regular polytope, regular 4-polytope, four-dimensional polytope. They are the four-dimensional analogues of the Regular polyhedron, regular polyhedra in three dimensions and the regul ...
: the
5-cell In geometry, the 5-cell is the convex 4-polytope with Schläfli symbol . It is a 5-vertex four-dimensional space, four-dimensional object bounded by five tetrahedral cells. It is also known as a C5, hypertetrahedron, pentachoron, pentatope, pe ...
{3,3,3} and
tesseract In geometry, a tesseract or 4-cube is a four-dimensional hypercube, analogous to a two-dimensional square and a three-dimensional cube. Just as the perimeter of the square consists of four edges and the surface of the cube consists of six ...
{4,3,3} of Euclidean 4-space, and the hexagonal tiling honeycomb {6,3,3} of hyperbolic space. All of these have a
tetrahedral In geometry, a tetrahedron (: tetrahedra or tetrahedrons), also known as a triangular pyramid, is a polyhedron composed of four triangular Face (geometry), faces, six straight Edge (geometry), edges, and four vertex (geometry), vertices. The tet ...
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 ...
{3,3}: {{Tetrahedral vertex figure tessellations small


{5,3,p} polytopes

The 120-cell is a part of a sequence of 4-polytopes and honeycombs with dodecahedral cells: {{Dodecahedral_tessellations_small


Tetrahedrally diminished 120-cell

Since the 600-point 120-cell has 5 disjoint inscribed 600-cells, it can be diminished by the removal of one of those 120-point 600-cells, creating an irregular 480-point 4-polytope.{{Efn, The diminishment of the 600-point 120-cell to a 480-point 4-polytope by removal of one if its 600-cells is analogous to the diminishment of the 120-point 600-cell by removal of one of its 5 disjoint inscribed 24-cells, creating the 96-point
snub 24-cell In geometry, the snub 24-cell or snub disicositetrachoron is a convex uniform 4-polytope composed of 120 regular Tetrahedron, tetrahedral and 24 Regular icosahedron, icosahedral cell (mathematics), cells. Five tetrahedra and three icosahedra meet ...
. Similarly, the 8-cell tesseract can be seen as a 16-point diminished 24-cell from which one 8-point 16-cell has been removed. Each dodecahedral cell of the 120-cell is diminished by removal of 4 of its 20 vertices, creating an irregular 16-point polyhedron called the
tetrahedrally diminished dodecahedron In a tetrahedral molecular geometry, a central atom is located at the center with four substituents that are located at the corners of a tetrahedron. The bond angles are arccos(−) = 109.4712206...° ≈ 109.5° when all four substituents are ...
because the 4 vertices removed formed a tetrahedron inscribed in the dodecahedron. Since the vertex figure of the dodecahedron is the triangle, each truncated vertex is replaced by a triangle. The 12 pentagon faces are replaced by 12 trapezoids, as one vertex of each pentagon is removed and two of its edges are replaced by the pentagon's diagonal chord.{{Efn, name=face pentagon chord The tetrahedrally diminished dodecahedron has 16 vertices and 16 faces: 12 trapezoid faces and four equilateral triangle faces. Since the vertex figure of the 120-cell is the tetrahedron,{{Efn, Each 120-cell vertex figure is actually a low tetrahedral pyramid, an irregular
5-cell In geometry, the 5-cell is the convex 4-polytope with Schläfli symbol . It is a 5-vertex four-dimensional space, four-dimensional object bounded by five tetrahedral cells. It is also known as a C5, hypertetrahedron, pentachoron, pentatope, pe ...
with a regular tetrahedron base., name=truncated apex each truncated vertex is replaced by a tetrahedron, leaving 120 tetrahedrally diminished dodecahedron cells and 120 regular tetrahedron cells. The regular dodecahedron and the tetrahedrally diminished dodecahedron both have 30 edges, and the regular 120-cell and the tetrahedrally diminished 120-cell both have 1200 edges. The 480-point diminished 120-cell may be called the tetrahedrally diminished 120-cell because its cells are tetrahedrally diminished, or the 600-cell diminished 120-cell because the vertices removed formed a 600-cell inscribed in the 120-cell, or even the regular 5-cells diminished 120-cell because removing the 120 vertices removes one vertex from each of the 120 inscribed regular 5-cells, leaving 120 regular tetrahedra.{{Efn, name=inscribed 5-cells


Davis 120-cell manifold

The Davis 120-cell manifold, introduced by {{harvtxt, Davis, 1985, is a compact 4-dimensional hyperbolic manifold obtained by identifying opposite faces of the 120-cell, whose universal cover gives the regular honeycomb {5,3,3,5} of 4-dimensional hyperbolic space.


See also

* Uniform 4-polytope family with ,3,3symmetry * 57-cell – an abstract regular
4-polytope In geometry, a 4-polytope (sometimes also called a polychoron, polycell, or polyhedroid) is a four-dimensional polytope. It is a connected and closed figure, composed of lower-dimensional polytopal elements: Vertex (geometry), vertices, Edge (geo ...
constructed from 57 hemi-dodecahedra. *
600-cell In geometry, the 600-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol . It is also known as the C600, hexacosichoron and hexacosihedroid. It is also called a tetraplex (abbreviated from ...
- the dual
4-polytope In geometry, a 4-polytope (sometimes also called a polychoron, polycell, or polyhedroid) is a four-dimensional polytope. It is a connected and closed figure, composed of lower-dimensional polytopal elements: Vertex (geometry), vertices, Edge (geo ...
to the 120-cell


Notes

{{Notelist


Citations

{{Reflist


References

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External links

* {{MathWorld , urlname = 120-Cell , title = 120-Cell *{{GlossaryForHyperspace , anchor=hecatonicosachoron , title=Hecatonicosachoron ** {{PolyCell , urlname = section4.html, title = Convex uniform polychora based on the hecatonicosachoron (120-cell) and hexacosichoron (600-cell) - Model 32 * {{KlitzingPolytopes, polychora.htm, 4D uniform polytopes (polychora), o3o3o5x - hi

Marco Möller's Regular polytopes in R4 (German)
120-cell explorer
– A free interactive program that allows you to learn about a number of the 120-cell symmetries. The 120-cell is projected to 3 dimensions and then rendered using OpenGL.
Construction of the Hyper-Dodecahedron

YouTube animation of the construction of the 120-cell
Gian Marco Todesco. {{H4_family {{Regular 4-polytopes {{Polytopes {{Authority control Individual graphs Regular 4-polytopes Articles containing video clips