
In
geometry, runcination is an operation that cuts a
regular polytope (or
honeycomb) simultaneously along the faces, edges, and vertices, creating new facets in place of the original face, edge, and vertex centers.
It is a higher order truncation operation, following
cantellation, and
truncation
In mathematics and computer science, truncation is limiting the number of digits right of the decimal point.
Truncation and floor function
Truncation of positive real numbers can be done using the floor function. Given a number x \in \mathbb ...
.
It is represented by an extended
Schläfli symbol
In geometry, the Schläfli symbol is a notation of the form \ that defines regular polytopes and tessellations.
The Schläfli symbol is named after the 19th-century Swiss mathematician Ludwig Schläfli, who generalized Euclidean geometry to more ...
t
0,3. This operation only exists for
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: vertices, edges, faces (polygons), an ...
s or higher.
This operation is dual-symmetric for regular
uniform 4-polytopes and
3-space
Three-dimensional space (also: 3D space, 3-space or, rarely, tri-dimensional space) is a geometric setting in which three values (called ''parameters'') are required to determine the position of an element (i.e., point). This is the informa ...
convex uniform honeycomb
In geometry, a convex uniform honeycomb is a uniform polytope, uniform tessellation which fills three-dimensional Euclidean space with non-overlapping convex polyhedron, convex uniform polyhedron, uniform polyhedral cells.
Twenty-eight such honey ...
s.
For a regular 4-polytope, the original cells remain, but become separated. The gaps at the separated faces become
p-gonal prisms. The gaps between the separated edges become r-gonal prisms. The gaps between the separated vertices become cells. The
vertex figure for a regular 4-polytope is an ''q''-gonal
antiprism (called an ''antipodium'' if ''p'' and ''r'' are different).
For regular 4-polytopes/honeycombs, this operation is also called
expansion by
Alicia Boole Stott, as imagined by moving the cells of the regular form away from the center, and filling in new faces in the gaps for each opened vertex and edge.
Runcinated 4-polytopes/honeycombs forms:
See also
*
Uniform polyhedron
*
Uniform 4-polytope
*
Rectification (geometry)
In Euclidean geometry, rectification, also known as critical truncation or complete-truncation, is the process of truncating a polytope by marking the midpoints of all its Edge (geometry), edges, and cutting off its Vertex (geometry), vertices ...
*
Truncation (geometry)
*
Cantellation (geometry)
References
*
Coxeter, H.S.M. ''
Regular Polytopes'', (3rd edition, 1973), Dover edition, (pp. 145–154 Chapter 8: Truncation, p 210 Expansion)
*
Norman Johnson ''Uniform Polytopes'', Manuscript (1991)
**
N.W. Johnson: ''The Theory of Uniform Polytopes and Honeycombs'', Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Toronto, 1966
*
John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel,
Chaim Goodman-Strauss, ''The Symmetries of Things'' 2008, (Chapter 26)
External links
* {{mathworld , urlname = Expansion , title = Expansion
Polytopes