Regular Compound Tiling
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regular polytope compound Regular may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Music * Regular (Badfinger song), "Regular" (Badfinger song) * Regular tunings of stringed instruments, tunings with equal intervals between the paired notes of successive open strings Other ...
s in Euclidean, spherical and hyperbolic spaces.


Two dimensional compounds

For any natural number n, there are n-pointed star regular polygonal stars with Schläfli symbols for all m such that m < n/2 (strictly speaking =) and m and n are
coprime In number theory, two integers and are coprime, relatively prime or mutually prime if the only positive integer that is a divisor of both of them is 1. Consequently, any prime number that divides does not divide , and vice versa. This is equiv ...
. When m and n are not coprime, the star polygon obtained will be a regular polygon with ''n''/''m'' sides. A new figure is obtained by rotating these regular ''n''/''m''-gons one vertex to the left on the original polygon until the number of vertices rotated equals ''n''/''m'' minus one, and combining these figures. An extreme case of this is where ''n''/''m'' is 2, producing a figure consisting of ''n''/2 straight line segments; this is called a degenerate star polygon. In other cases where ''n'' and ''m'' have a common factor, a star polygon for a lower ''n'' is obtained, and rotated versions can be combined. These figures are called star figures, improper star polygons or compound polygons. The same notation is often used for them, although authorities such as Grünbaum (1994) regard (with some justification) the form ''k'' as being more correct, where usually ''k'' = ''m''. A further complication comes when we compound two or more star polygons, as for example two pentagrams, differing by a rotation of 36°, inscribed in a decagon. This is correctly written in the form ''k'', as 2, rather than the commonly used . Coxeter's extended notation for compounds is of the form ''c'' 'd'''e'', indicating that ''d'' distinct 's together cover the vertices of ''c'' times and the facets of ''e'' times. If no regular exists, the first part of the notation is removed, leaving 'd'''e''; the opposite holds if no regular exists. The dual of ''c'' 'd'''e'' is ''e'' 'd'''c''. If ''c'' or ''e'' are 1, they may be omitted. For compound polygons, this notation reduces to 'k'' for example, the
hexagram , can be seen as a compound polygon, compound composed of an upwards (blue here) and downwards (pink) facing equilateral triangle, with their intersection as a regular hexagon (in green). A hexagram (Greek language, Greek) or sexagram (Latin l ...
may be written thus as Regular skew polygons also create compounds, seen in the edges of
prismatic compound of antiprisms In geometry, a prismatic compound of antiprism is a category of uniform polyhedron compound. Each member of this infinite family of uniform polyhedron compounds is a symmetric arrangement of antiprisms sharing a common axis of rotational symmetry ...
, for instance:


Three dimensional compounds

A regular polyhedron compound can be defined as a compound which, like a regular polyhedron, is
vertex-transitive In geometry, a polytope (e.g. a polygon or polyhedron) or a tiling is isogonal or vertex-transitive if all its vertices are equivalent under the symmetries of the figure. This implies that each vertex is surrounded by the same kinds of face i ...
,
edge-transitive In geometry, a polytope (for example, a polygon or a polyhedron) or a Tessellation, tiling is isotoxal () or edge-transitive if its Symmetry, symmetries act Transitive group action, transitively on its Edge (geometry), edges. Informally, this mea ...
, and
face-transitive In geometry, a tessellation of dimension (a plane tiling) or higher, or a polytope of dimension (a polyhedron) or higher, is isohedral or face-transitive if all its Face (geometry), faces are the same. More specifically, all faces must be not ...
. With this definition there are 5 regular compounds. Coxeter's notation for regular compounds is given in the table above, incorporating
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 ...
s. The material inside the square brackets, 'd'' denotes the components of the compound: ''d'' separate 's. The material ''before'' the square brackets denotes the vertex arrangement of the compound: ''c'' 'd''is a compound of ''d'' 's sharing the vertices of an counted ''c'' times. The material ''after'' the square brackets denotes the facet arrangement of the compound: 'd'''e'' is a compound of ''d'' 's sharing the faces of counted ''e'' times. These may be combined: thus ''c'' 'd'''e'' is a compound of ''d'' 's sharing the vertices of counted ''c'' times ''and'' the faces of counted ''e'' times. This notation can be generalised to compounds in any number of dimensions. If improper regular polyhedra (
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 ...
) are allowed, then two more compounds are possible: 2 and its dual .


Euclidean and hyperbolic plane compounds

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 yet been proven. A distinction must be made when an integer can be expressed in the forms b2+c2 or b2+bc+c2 in two different ways, e.g. 145 = 122 + 12 = 92 + 82, or 91 = 92 + 9 â‹… 1 + 12 = 62 + 6 â‹… 5 + 52. In such cases, Coxeter notates the sum explicitly, e.g. 144+1)as opposed to 81+64) The following compounds of compact or paracompact hyperbolic tessellations were known to Coxeter in 1964, though a proof of completeness was not then known: The Euclidean and hyperbolic compound families appear because h = , i.e. taking alternate vertices of a results in a . They are thus the Euclidean and hyperbolic analogues of the spherical stella octangula, which is the q=3 case. It is also the case that h = , yielding the compound and its dual Now if we take the dual of the , we obtain a third whose vertices are at the centres of alternate faces of the other two ; this gives the compound and its dual 2 These compounds are hyperbolic if q > 3 and Euclidean if q = 3. These compounds show an analogy to the spherical compounds , and 2 If one sets q = 8 in and q = 4 in , then one obtains the special cases and . The latter's 's can be replaced by pairs of 's according to the former, giving the self-dual compound


Four dimensional compounds

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 ...
lists 32 regular compounds of regular 4-polytopes in his book ''
Regular Polytopes ''Regular Polytopes'' is a geometry book on regular polytopes written by Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter. It was originally published by Methuen in 1947 and by Pitman Publishing in 1948, with a second edition published by Macmillan in 1963 and a th ...
''.. Table VII, p. 305 McMullen adds six in his paper ''New Regular Compounds of 4-Polytopes'', in which he also proves that the list is now complete. In the following tables, the superscript (var) indicates that the labeled compounds are distinct from the other compounds with the same symbols. There are two different compounds of 75 tesseracts: one shares the vertices of a 120-cell, while the other shares the vertices of a 600-cell. It immediately follows therefore that the corresponding dual compounds of 75 16-cells are also different. There are also fourteen ''partially regular'' compounds, that are either vertex-transitive or cell-transitive but not both. The seven vertex-transitive partially regular compounds are the duals of the seven cell-transitive partially regular compounds. Although the 5-cell and 24-cell are both self-dual, their dual compounds (the
compound of two 5-cells In geometry, the 5-cell is the convex 4-polytope with Schläfli symbol . It is a 5-vertex four-dimensional object bounded by five tetrahedral cells. It is also known as a C5, hypertetrahedron, pentachoron, pentatope, pentahedroid, tetrahedral ...
and compound of two 24-cells) are not considered to be regular, unlike the compound of two tetrahedra and the various dual polygon compounds, because they are neither vertex-regular nor cell-regular: they are not facetings or stellations of any regular 4-polytope. However, they are vertex-, edge-, face-, and cell-transitive.


Euclidean 3-space compounds

The only regular Euclidean compound honeycombs are an infinite family of compounds of
cubic honeycomb The cubic honeycomb or cubic cellulation is the only proper regular space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb (geometry), honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space made up of cube, cubic cells. It has 4 cubes around every edge, and 8 cubes around each verte ...
s, all sharing vertices and faces with another cubic honeycomb. This compound can have any number of cubic honeycombs. The Coxeter notation is 'd''


Hyperbolic 3-space compounds

C. W. L. Garner described two dual pairs of regular hyperbolic compound honeycombs in 1970: the compact pair 2 and , and the paracompact pair and He did not consider vertex-regular compounds where the vertices are at infinity, or (reciprocally) cell-regular compounds where the cells are centred at infinity. In 2019,
Peter McMullen Peter McMullen (born 11 May 1942) is a British mathematician, a professor emeritus of mathematics at University College London. Education and career McMullen earned bachelor's and master's degrees from Trinity College, Cambridge, and studied at ...
(who focused only on the compact case) pointed out and filled a gap in Garner's proof of completeness, so that it is now proven that 2 and are the only compact regular hyperbolic honeycomb compounds.


Five dimensions and higher compounds

There are no regular compounds in five or six dimensions. There are three known seven-dimensional compounds (16, 240, or 480 7-simplices), and six known eight-dimensional ones (16, 240, or 480
8-cube In geometry, an 8-cube is an eight-dimensional hypercube. It has 256 vertices, 1024 edges, 1792 square faces, 1792 cubic cells, 1120 tesseract 4-faces, 448 5-cube 5-faces, 112 6-cube 6-faces, and 16 7-cube 7-faces. It is represented b ...
s or
8-orthoplex In geometry, an 8-orthoplex or 8-cross polytope is a regular 8-polytope with 16 Vertex (geometry), vertices, 112 Edge (geometry), edges, 448 triangle Face (geometry), faces, 1120 tetrahedron Cell (mathematics), cells, 1792 5-cell ''4-faces'', 179 ...
es). There is also one compound of ''n''-simplices in ''n''-dimensional space provided that ''n'' is one less than a power of two, and also two compounds (one of ''n''-cubes and a dual one of ''n''-orthoplexes) in ''n''-dimensional space if ''n'' is a power of two. The Coxeter notation for these compounds are (using α''n'' = , β''n'' = , γ''n'' = ): * 7-simplexes: ''c''γ7 6''c''α7'c''β7, where ''c'' = 1, 15, or 30 * 8-orthoplexes: ''c''γ8 6''c''β8* 8-cubes: 6''c''γ8'c''β8 The general cases (where ''n'' = 2''k'' and ''d'' = 22''k'' − ''k'' − 1, ''k'' = 2, 3, 4, ...): * Simplexes: γ''n''−1 'd''α''n''−1²''n''−1 * Orthoplexes: γ''n'' 'd''β''n''* Hypercubes: 'd''γ''n''²''n''


Euclidean honeycomb compound

A known family of regular Euclidean compound honeycombs in five or more dimensions is an infinite family of compounds of
hypercubic honeycomb In geometry, a hypercubic honeycomb is a family of regular honeycombs (tessellations) in -dimensional spaces with the Schläfli symbols and containing the symmetry of Coxeter group (or ) for . The tessellation is constructed from 4 -hypercube ...
s, all sharing vertices and faces with another hypercubic honeycomb. This compound can have any number of hypercubic honeycombs. The Coxeter notation is δ''n'' 'd''δ''n''´''n'' where δ''n'' = when ''n'' = 2 and when ''n'' ≥ 3.


Hyperbolic honeycomb compounds

In four dimensions, Garner (1970) asserted the existence of 6 although neither justification nor construction was given, McMullen (2019) proved that this claim is correct. McMullen showed the existence of the following compact compounds: * 2 7and dual 7; * 10 5and dual 50; * 6(self-dual, comes in left- and right-handed forms); * 6 56 (self-dual, comes in left- and right-handed forms); * 12 122 (self-dual). McMullen conjectures that this list is complete regarding the compact compounds. If any more compact compounds exist, they must involve or being inscribed in (the only case not yet excluded). In five dimensions, there is only one regular hyperbolic honeycomb whose vertices are not at infinity: . Thus there are no regular compounds conforming to Garner's restriction that the vertices of a vertex-regular compound should not be at infinity. In six dimensions or higher, there are no compact or paracompact regular hyperbolic honeycombs at all, and thus no compact or paracompact compounds exist.


See also

*
List of regular polytopes This article lists the regular polytopes in Euclidean, spherical and hyperbolic spaces. Overview This table shows a summary of regular polytope counts by rank. There are no Euclidean regular star tessellations in any number of dimensions. ...


References


Bibliography

* See in particular Tables I and II: Regular polytopes and honeycombs, pp. 294–296. *. {{refend Multi-dimensional geometry Lists of shapes Mathematics-related lists