Spherical Cube
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A cube or regular hexahedron is a
three-dimensional In geometry, a three-dimensional space (3D space, 3-space or, rarely, tri-dimensional space) is a mathematical space in which three values (''coordinates'') are required to determine the position (geometry), position of a point (geometry), poi ...
solid object 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 ...
, which is bounded by six congruent
square In geometry, a square is a regular polygon, regular quadrilateral. It has four straight sides of equal length and four equal angles. Squares are special cases of rectangles, which have four equal angles, and of rhombuses, which have four equal si ...
faces, a type of
polyhedron In geometry, a polyhedron (: polyhedra or polyhedrons; ) is a three-dimensional figure with flat polygonal Face (geometry), faces, straight Edge (geometry), edges and sharp corners or Vertex (geometry), vertices. The term "polyhedron" may refer ...
. It has twelve congruent edges and eight vertices. It is a type of
parallelepiped In geometry, a parallelepiped is a three-dimensional figure formed by six parallelograms (the term ''rhomboid'' is also sometimes used with this meaning). By analogy, it relates to a parallelogram just as a cube relates to a square. Three equiva ...
, with pairs of parallel opposite faces, and more specifically a
rhombohedron In geometry, a rhombohedron (also called a rhombic hexahedron or, inaccurately, a rhomboid) is a special case of a parallelepiped in which all six faces are congruent rhombi. It can be used to define the rhombohedral lattice system, a honeycomb w ...
, with congruent edges, and a
rectangular cuboid A rectangular cuboid is a special case of a cuboid with rectangular faces in which all of its dihedral angles are right angles. This shape is also called rectangular parallelepiped or orthogonal parallelepiped. Many writers just call these ...
, with
right angle In geometry and trigonometry, a right angle is an angle of exactly 90 Degree (angle), degrees or radians corresponding to a quarter turn (geometry), turn. If a Line (mathematics)#Ray, ray is placed so that its endpoint is on a line and the ad ...
s between pairs of intersecting faces and pairs of intersecting edges. It is an example of many classes of polyhedra:
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 ...
,
regular polyhedron A regular polyhedron is a polyhedron whose symmetry group acts transitive group action, transitively on its Flag (geometry), flags. A regular polyhedron is highly symmetrical, being all of edge-transitive, vertex-transitive and face-transitive. In ...
,
parallelohedron In geometry, a parallelohedron or Fedorov polyhedron is a convex polyhedron that can be Translation (geometry), translated without rotations to fill Euclidean space, producing a Honeycomb (geometry), honeycomb in which all copies of the polyhed ...
,
zonohedron In geometry, a zonohedron is a convex polyhedron that is point symmetry, centrally symmetric, every face of which is a polygon that is centrally symmetric (a zonogon). Any zonohedron may equivalently be described as the Minkowski addition, Minkows ...
, and
plesiohedron In geometry, a plesiohedron is a special kind of space-filling polyhedron, defined as the Voronoi cell of a symmetric Delone set. Three-dimensional Euclidean space can be completely filled by copies of any one of these shapes, with no overlaps. The ...
. The
dual polyhedron In geometry, every polyhedron is associated with a second dual structure, where the vertices of one correspond to the faces of the other, and the edges between pairs of vertices of one correspond to the edges between pairs of faces of the other ...
of a cube is the
regular octahedron In geometry, a regular octahedron is a Platonic solid composed of eight equilateral triangles, four of which meet at each vertex. Regular octahedra occur in nature as crystal structures. An octahedron, more generally, can be any eight-sided polyh ...
. The cube can be represented in many ways, one of which is the graph known as the cubical graph. It can be constructed by using the
Cartesian product of graphs In graph theory, the Cartesian product of graphs and is a graph such that: * the vertex set of is the Cartesian product ; and * two vertices and are adjacent in if and only if either ** and is adjacent to in , or ** and is adjace ...
. The cube is the three-dimensional
hypercube In geometry, a hypercube is an ''n''-dimensional analogue of a square ( ) and a cube ( ); the special case for is known as a ''tesseract''. It is a closed, compact, convex figure whose 1- skeleton consists of groups of opposite parallel l ...
, a family of
polytope In elementary geometry, a polytope is a geometric object with flat sides ('' faces''). Polytopes are the generalization of three-dimensional polyhedra to any number of dimensions. Polytopes may exist in any general number of dimensions as an ...
s also including the two-dimensional square and four-dimensional
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 ...
. A cube with
unit Unit may refer to: General measurement * Unit of measurement, a definite magnitude of a physical quantity, defined and adopted by convention or by law **International System of Units (SI), modern form of the metric system **English units, histo ...
side length is the canonical unit of
volume Volume is a measure of regions in three-dimensional space. It is often quantified numerically using SI derived units (such as the cubic metre and litre) or by various imperial or US customary units (such as the gallon, quart, cubic inch) ...
in three-dimensional space, relative to which other solid objects are measured. Other related figures involve the construction of polyhedra, space-filling and
honeycomb A honeycomb is a mass of Triangular prismatic honeycomb#Hexagonal prismatic honeycomb, hexagonal prismatic cells built from beeswax by honey bees in their beehive, nests to contain their brood (eggs, larvae, and pupae) and stores of honey and pol ...
s,
polycube image:tetracube_categories.svg, upAll 8 one-sided tetracubes – if chirality is ignored, the bottom 2 in grey are considered the same, giving 7 free tetracubes in total image:9L cube puzzle solution.svg, A puzzle involving arranging nine L tricube ...
s, as well as cubes in compounds, spherical, and topological space. The cube was discovered in antiquity, associated with the nature of
earth Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to Planetary habitability, harbor life. This is enabled by Earth being an ocean world, the only one in the Solar System sustaining liquid surface water. Almost all ...
by
Plato Plato ( ; Greek language, Greek: , ; born  BC, died 348/347 BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher of the Classical Greece, Classical period who is considered a foundational thinker in Western philosophy and an innovator of the writte ...
, for whom the Platonic solids are named. It can be derived differently to create more polyhedra, and it has applications to construct a new
polyhedron In geometry, a polyhedron (: polyhedra or polyhedrons; ) is a three-dimensional figure with flat polygonal Face (geometry), faces, straight Edge (geometry), edges and sharp corners or Vertex (geometry), vertices. The term "polyhedron" may refer ...
by attaching others. Other applications include popular culture of toys and games, arts, optical illusions, architectural buildings, as well as natural science and technology.


Properties

A cube is a special case of
rectangular cuboid A rectangular cuboid is a special case of a cuboid with rectangular faces in which all of its dihedral angles are right angles. This shape is also called rectangular parallelepiped or orthogonal parallelepiped. Many writers just call these ...
in which the edges are equal in length. Like other cuboids, every face of a cube has four vertices, each of which connects with three congruent lines. These edges form
square In geometry, a square is a regular polygon, regular quadrilateral. It has four straight sides of equal length and four equal angles. Squares are special cases of rectangles, which have four equal angles, and of rhombuses, which have four equal si ...
faces, making the dihedral angle of a cube between every two adjacent squares the
interior angle In geometry, an angle of a polygon is formed by two adjacent sides. For a simple polygon (non-self-intersecting), regardless of whether it is convex or non-convex, this angle is called an internal angle (or interior angle) if a point withi ...
of a square, 90°. Hence, the cube has six faces, twelve edges, and eight vertices. Because of such properties, it is categorized as one of the five
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 ...
s, a
polyhedron In geometry, a polyhedron (: polyhedra or polyhedrons; ) is a three-dimensional figure with flat polygonal Face (geometry), faces, straight Edge (geometry), edges and sharp corners or Vertex (geometry), vertices. The term "polyhedron" may refer ...
in which all the
regular polygon In Euclidean geometry, a regular polygon is a polygon that is Equiangular polygon, direct equiangular (all angles are equal in measure) and Equilateral polygon, equilateral (all sides have the same length). Regular polygons may be either ''convex ...
s are
congruent Congruence may refer to: Mathematics * Congruence (geometry), being the same size and shape * Congruence or congruence relation, in abstract algebra, an equivalence relation on an algebraic structure that is compatible with the structure * In modu ...
and the same number of faces meet at each vertex. Every three square faces surrounding a vertex is
orthogonal In mathematics, orthogonality (mathematics), orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of ''perpendicularity''. Although many authors use the two terms ''perpendicular'' and ''orthogonal'' interchangeably, the term ''perpendic ...
each other, so the cube is classified as
orthogonal polyhedron An orthogonal polyhedron is a polyhedron in which all edges are parallel to the axes of a Cartesian coordinate system, resulting in the orthogonal faces and implying the dihedral angle between faces are right angles. The angle between Jessen's i ...
. The cube may also be considered as the
parallelepiped In geometry, a parallelepiped is a three-dimensional figure formed by six parallelograms (the term ''rhomboid'' is also sometimes used with this meaning). By analogy, it relates to a parallelogram just as a cube relates to a square. Three equiva ...
in which all of its edges are equal (or more specifically a
rhombohedron In geometry, a rhombohedron (also called a rhombic hexahedron or, inaccurately, a rhomboid) is a special case of a parallelepiped in which all six faces are congruent rhombi. It can be used to define the rhombohedral lattice system, a honeycomb w ...
with congruent edges), and as the
trigonal trapezohedron In geometry, a trigonal trapezohedron is a polyhedron with six congruent quadrilateral faces, which may be scalene or rhomboid. The variety with rhombus-shaped faces faces is a rhombohedron. An alternative name for the same shape is the ''trig ...
since its square faces are the
rhombi In plane Euclidean geometry, a rhombus (: rhombi or rhombuses) is a quadrilateral whose four sides all have the same length. Another name is equilateral quadrilateral, since equilateral means that all of its sides are equal in length. The rhom ...
' special case.


Measurement and other metric properties

Given a cube with edge length a . The face diagonal of a cube is the
diagonal In geometry, a diagonal is a line segment joining two vertices of a polygon or polyhedron, when those vertices are not on the same edge. Informally, any sloping line is called diagonal. The word ''diagonal'' derives from the ancient Greek � ...
of a square a\sqrt , and the
space diagonal In geometry, a space diagonal (also interior diagonal or body diagonal) of a polyhedron is a line connecting two vertices that are not on the same face. Space diagonals contrast with '' face diagonals'', which connect vertices on the same face (b ...
of a cube is a line connecting two vertices that is not in the same face, formulated as a \sqrt . Both formulas can be determined by using
Pythagorean theorem In mathematics, the Pythagorean theorem or Pythagoras' theorem is a fundamental relation in Euclidean geometry between the three sides of a right triangle. It states that the area of the square whose side is the hypotenuse (the side opposite t ...
. The surface area of a cube A is six times the area of a square: A = 6a^2. The volume of a cuboid is the product of its length, width, and height. Because all the edges of a cube are equal in length, the formula for the volume of a cube as the third power of its side length, leading to the use of the term ''
cubic Cubic may refer to: Science and mathematics * Cube (algebra), "cubic" measurement * Cube, a three-dimensional solid object bounded by six square faces, facets or sides, with three meeting at each vertex ** Cubic crystal system, a crystal system w ...
'' to mean raising any number to the third power: V = a^3. One special case is the
unit cube A unit cube, more formally a cube of side 1, is a cube whose sides are 1 unit long.. See in particulap. 671. The volume of a 3-dimensional unit cube is 1 cubic unit, and its total surface area is 6 square units.. Unit hypercube The term '' ...
, so named for measuring a single
unit of length A unit of length refers to any arbitrarily chosen and accepted reference standard for measurement of length. The most common units in modern use are the metric units, used in every country globally. In the United States the U.S. customary un ...
along each edge. It follows that each face is a
unit square In mathematics, a unit square is a square whose sides have length . Often, ''the'' unit square refers specifically to the square in the Cartesian plane with corners at the four points ), , , and . Cartesian coordinates In a Cartesian coordinat ...
and that the entire figure has a volume of 1 cubic unit.
Prince Rupert's cube In geometry, Prince Rupert's cube is the largest cube that can pass through a hole cut through a unit cube without splitting it into separate pieces. Its side length is approximately 1.06, 6% larger than the side length 1 of the unit cube through ...
, named after
Prince Rupert of the Rhine Prince Rupert of the Rhine, Duke of Cumberland, (17 December 1619 ( O.S.) 7 December 1619 (N.S.)– 29 November 1682 (O.S.) December 1682 (N.S) was an English-German army officer, admiral, scientist, and colonial governor. He first rose to ...
, is the largest cube that can pass through a hole cut into the unit cube, despite having sides approximately 6% longer. A polyhedron that can pass through a copy of itself of the same size or smaller is said to have the Rupert property. A geometric problem of
doubling the cube Doubling the cube, also known as the Delian problem, is an ancient geometry, geometric problem. Given the Edge (geometry), edge of a cube, the problem requires the construction of the edge of a second cube whose volume is double that of the first ...
—alternatively known as the ''Delian problem''—requires the construction of a cube with a volume twice the original by using a
compass and straightedge In geometry, straightedge-and-compass construction – also known as ruler-and-compass construction, Euclidean construction, or classical construction – is the construction of lengths, angles, and other geometric figures using only an Idealiz ...
solely. Ancient mathematicians could not solve this old problem until the French mathematician
Pierre Wantzel Pierre Laurent Wantzel (5 June 1814 in Paris – 21 May 1848 in Paris) was a French mathematician who proved that several ancient geometric problems were impossible to solve using only compass and straightedge. In a paper from 1837, Wantzel pro ...
in 1837 proved it was impossible. The cube has three types of
closed geodesic In differential geometry and dynamical systems, a closed geodesic on a Riemannian manifold is a geodesic that returns to its starting point with the same tangent direction. It may be formalized as the projection of a closed orbit of the geodesic f ...
s. The closed geodesics are paths on a cube's surface that are locally straight. In other words, they avoid the vertices of the polyhedron, follow line segments across the faces that they cross, and form complementary angles on the two incident faces of each edge that they cross. Two of its types are planar. The first type lies in a plane parallel to any face of the cube, forming a square, with the length being equal to the perimeter of a face, four times the length of each edge. The second type lies in a plane perpendicular to the long diagonal, forming a regular hexagon; its length is 3 \sqrt 2 times that of an edge. The third type is a non-planar hexagon.


Relation to the spheres

With edge length a , the
inscribed sphere image:Circumcentre.svg, An inscribed triangle of a circle In geometry, an inscribed plane (geometry), planar shape or solid (geometry), solid is one that is enclosed by and "fits snugly" inside another geometric shape or solid. To say that "figu ...
of a cube is the sphere tangent to the faces of a cube at their centroids, with radius \fraca . The
midsphere In geometry, the midsphere or intersphere of a convex polyhedron is a sphere which is tangent to every Edge (geometry), edge of the polyhedron. Not every polyhedron has a midsphere, but the uniform polyhedron, uniform polyhedra, including the reg ...
of a cube is the sphere tangent to the edges of a cube, with radius \fraca . The
circumscribed sphere In geometry, a circumscribed sphere of a polyhedron is a sphere that contains the polyhedron and touches each of the polyhedron's Vertex (geometry), vertices. The word circumsphere is sometimes used to mean the same thing, by analogy with the te ...
of a cube is the sphere tangent to the vertices of a cube, with radius \fraca . For a cube whose circumscribed sphere has radius R , and for a given point in its three-dimensional space with distances d_i from the cube's eight vertices, it is: \frac\sum_^8 d_i^4 + \frac = \left(\frac\sum_^8 d_i^2 + \frac\right)^2.


Symmetry

The cube has
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 ...
\mathrm_\mathrm . It is composed of
reflection symmetry In mathematics, reflection symmetry, line symmetry, mirror symmetry, or mirror-image symmetry is symmetry with respect to a Reflection (mathematics), reflection. That is, a figure which does not change upon undergoing a reflection has reflecti ...
, a symmetry by cutting into two halves by a plane. There are nine reflection symmetries: the five are cut the cube from the midpoints of its edges, and the four are cut diagonally. It is also composed of
rotational symmetry Rotational symmetry, also known as radial symmetry in geometry, is the property a shape (geometry), shape has when it looks the same after some rotation (mathematics), rotation by a partial turn (angle), turn. An object's degree of rotational s ...
, a symmetry by rotating it around the axis, from which the appearance is interchangeable. It has octahedral rotation symmetry \mathrm : three axes pass through the cube's opposite faces centroid, six through the cube's opposite edges midpoints, and four through the cube's opposite vertices; each of these axes is respectively four-fold rotational symmetry (0°, 90°, 180°, and 270°), two-fold rotational symmetry (0° and 180°), and three-fold rotational symmetry (0°, 120°, and 240°). Its
automorphism group In mathematics, the automorphism group of an object ''X'' is the group consisting of automorphisms of ''X'' under composition of morphisms. For example, if ''X'' is a finite-dimensional vector space, then the automorphism group of ''X'' is the g ...
is the order of 48. The
dual polyhedron In geometry, every polyhedron is associated with a second dual structure, where the vertices of one correspond to the faces of the other, and the edges between pairs of vertices of one correspond to the edges between pairs of faces of the other ...
can be obtained from each of the polyhedra's vertices tangent to a plane by the process known as
polar reciprocation In geometry, a pole and polar are respectively a point and a line that have a unique reciprocal relationship with respect to a given conic section. Polar reciprocation in a given circle is the transformation of each point in the plane into i ...
. One property of dual polyhedra is that the polyhedron and its dual share their three-dimensional symmetry point group. In this case, the dual polyhedron of a cube is the
regular octahedron In geometry, a regular octahedron is a Platonic solid composed of eight equilateral triangles, four of which meet at each vertex. Regular octahedra occur in nature as crystal structures. An octahedron, more generally, can be any eight-sided polyh ...
, and both of these polyhedron has the same symmetry, the octahedral symmetry. The cube is
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 ...
, meaning its two squares are alike and can be mapped by rotation and reflection. It 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 ...
, meaning all of its vertices are equivalent and can be mapped isometrically under its symmetry. It is also
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 ...
, meaning the same kind of faces surround each of its vertices in the same or reverse order, all two adjacent faces have the same dihedral angle. Therefore, the cube is
regular polyhedron A regular polyhedron is a polyhedron whose symmetry group acts transitive group action, transitively on its Flag (geometry), flags. A regular polyhedron is highly symmetrical, being all of edge-transitive, vertex-transitive and face-transitive. In ...
because it requires those properties. Each vertex is surrounded by three squares, so the cube is 4.4.4 by
vertex configuration In geometry, a vertex configuration is a shorthand notation for representing a polyhedron or Tessellation, tiling as the sequence of Face (geometry), faces around a Vertex (geometry), vertex. It has variously been called a vertex description, vert ...
or \ in
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 ...
.


Applications

Cubes have appeared in many roles in popular culture. It is the most common form of
dice A die (: dice, sometimes also used as ) is a small, throwable object with marked sides that can rest in multiple positions. Dice are used for generating random values, commonly as part of tabletop games, including dice games, board games, ro ...
. Puzzle toys such as pieces of a
Soma cube The Soma cube is a mechanical puzzle#Assembly, solid dissection puzzle invented by Danish polymath Piet Hein (scientist), Piet Hein in 1933 during a lecture on quantum mechanics conducted by Werner Heisenberg. Seven different Polycube, pieces ...
, Rubik's Cube, and Skewb are built of cubes. ''
Minecraft ''Minecraft'' is a 2011 sandbox game developed and published by the Swedish video game developer Mojang Studios. Originally created by Markus Persson, Markus "Notch" Persson using the Java (programming language), Java programming language, the ...
'' is an example of a sandbox video game of cubic blocks. The outdoor sculpture ''Alamo'' (1967) is a cube standing on a vertex.
Optical illusions In visual perception, an optical illusion (also called a visual illusion) is an illusion caused by the visual system and characterized by a visual percept that arguably appears to differ from reality. Illusions come in a wide variety; their ca ...
such as the impossible cube and
Necker cube The Necker cube is an optical illusion that was first published as a rhomboid in 1832 by Swiss crystallographer Louis Albert Necker. It is a simple wire-frame, two dimensional drawing of a cube with no visual cues as to its orientation, so i ...
have been explored by artists such as
M. C. Escher Maurits Cornelis Escher (; ; 17 June 1898 – 27 March 1972) was a Dutch graphic artist who made woodcuts, lithography, lithographs, and mezzotints, many of which were Mathematics and art, inspired by mathematics. Despite wide popular int ...
.
Salvador Dalí Salvador Domingo Felipe Jacinto Dalí i Domènech, Marquess of Dalí of Púbol (11 May 190423 January 1989), known as Salvador Dalí ( ; ; ), was a Spanish Surrealism, surrealist artist renowned for his technical skill, precise draftsmanship, ...
's painting '' Corpus Hypercubus'' (1954) contains an unfolding of a
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 ...
into a six-armed cross; a similar construction is central to
Robert A. Heinlein Robert Anson Heinlein ( ; July 7, 1907 – May 8, 1988) was an American science fiction author, aeronautical engineer, and naval officer. Sometimes called the "dean of science fiction writers", he was among the first to emphasize scientific acc ...
's short story " And He Built a Crooked House" (1940). The cube was applied in Alberti's treatise on
Renaissance architecture Renaissance architecture is the European architecture of the period between the early 15th and early 16th centuries in different regions, demonstrating a conscious revival and development of certain elements of Ancient Greece, ancient Greek and ...
, ''
De re aedificatoria (''On the Art of Building'') is a classic architectural treatise written by Leon Battista Alberti between 1443 and 1452. Although largely dependent on Vitruvius's , it was the first theoretical book on the subject written in the Italian Renais ...
'' (1450). '' Kubuswoningen'' is known for a set of cubical houses in which its
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 ...
al space diagonal becomes the main floor. Cubes are also found in natural science and technology. It is applied to the
unit cell In geometry, biology, mineralogy and solid state physics, a unit cell is a repeating unit formed by the vectors spanning the points of a lattice. Despite its suggestive name, the unit cell (unlike a unit vector In mathematics, a unit vector i ...
of a crystal known as a
cubic crystal system In crystallography, the cubic (or isometric) crystal system is a crystal system where the unit cell is in the shape of a cube. This is one of the most common and simplest shapes found in crystals and minerals. There are three main varieties o ...
.
Pyrite The mineral pyrite ( ), or iron pyrite, also known as fool's gold, is an iron sulfide with the chemical formula Fe S2 (iron (II) disulfide). Pyrite is the most abundant sulfide mineral. Pyrite's metallic luster and pale brass-yellow hue ...
is an example of a
mineral In geology and mineralogy, a mineral or mineral species is, broadly speaking, a solid substance with a fairly well-defined chemical composition and a specific crystal structure that occurs naturally in pure form.John P. Rafferty, ed. (2011): Mi ...
with a commonly cubic shape, although there are many varied shapes. The
radiolarian The Radiolaria, also called Radiozoa, are unicellular eukaryotes of diameter 0.1–0.2 mm that produce intricate mineral skeletons, typically with a central capsule dividing the cell into the inner and outer portions of endoplasm and ecto ...
''Lithocubus geometricus'', discovered by
Ernst Haeckel Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (; ; 16 February 1834 – 9 August 1919) was a German zoologist, natural history, naturalist, eugenics, eugenicist, Philosophy, philosopher, physician, professor, marine biology, marine biologist and artist ...
, has a cubic shape. A historical attempt to unify three physics ideas of relativity,
gravitation In physics, gravity (), also known as gravitation or a gravitational interaction, is a fundamental interaction, a mutual attraction between all massive particles. On Earth, gravity takes a slightly different meaning: the observed force b ...
, and
quantum mechanics Quantum mechanics is the fundamental physical Scientific theory, theory that describes the behavior of matter and of light; its unusual characteristics typically occur at and below the scale of atoms. Reprinted, Addison-Wesley, 1989, It is ...
used the framework of a cube known as a ''cGh'' cube.
Cubane Cubane is a synthetic hydrocarbon compound with the Chemical formula, formula . It consists of eight carbon atoms arranged at the corners of a Cube (geometry), cube, with one hydrogen atom attached to each carbon atom. A solid crystalline substanc ...
is a synthetic
hydrocarbon In organic chemistry, a hydrocarbon is an organic compound consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon. Hydrocarbons are examples of group 14 hydrides. Hydrocarbons are generally colourless and Hydrophobe, hydrophobic; their odor is usually fain ...
consisting of eight carbon
atom Atoms are the basic particles of the chemical elements. An atom consists of a atomic nucleus, nucleus of protons and generally neutrons, surrounded by an electromagnetically bound swarm of electrons. The chemical elements are distinguished fr ...
s arranged at the corners of a cube, with one
hydrogen Hydrogen is a chemical element; it has chemical symbol, symbol H and atomic number 1. It is the lightest and abundance of the chemical elements, most abundant chemical element in the universe, constituting about 75% of all baryon, normal matter ...
atom attached to each carbon atom. Other technological cubes include the spacecraft device CubeSat, and thermal radiation demonstration device Leslie cube. Cubical grids are usual in three-dimensional Cartesian coordinate systems. In computer graphics, Marching cubes, an algorithm divides the input volume into a discrete set of cubes known as the unit on isosurface, and the faces of a cube can be used for Cube mapping, mapping a shape. The
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 ...
s are five polyhedra known since antiquity. The set is named for
Plato Plato ( ; Greek language, Greek: , ; born  BC, died 348/347 BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher of the Classical Greece, Classical period who is considered a foundational thinker in Western philosophy and an innovator of the writte ...
who, in his dialogue Timaeus (dialogue), ''Timaeus'', attributed these solids to nature. One of them, the cube, represented the classical element of
earth Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to Planetary habitability, harbor life. This is enabled by Earth being an ocean world, the only one in the Solar System sustaining liquid surface water. Almost all ...
because of its stability. Euclid's Euclid's Elements, ''Elements'' defined the Platonic solids, including the cube, and showed how to find the ratio of the circumscribed sphere's diameter to the edge length. Following Plato's use of the regular polyhedra as symbols of nature, Johannes Kepler in his ''Harmonices Mundi'' sketched each of the Platonic solids; he decorated ane side of the cube with a tree. In his ''Mysterium Cosmographicum'', Kepler also proposed that the ratios between sizes of the orbits of the planets are the ratios between the sizes of the inscribed sphere, inscribed and
circumscribed sphere In geometry, a circumscribed sphere of a polyhedron is a sphere that contains the polyhedron and touches each of the polyhedron's Vertex (geometry), vertices. The word circumsphere is sometimes used to mean the same thing, by analogy with the te ...
s of the Platonic solids. That is, if the orbits are great circles on spheres, the sphere of Mercury is tangent to a
regular octahedron In geometry, a regular octahedron is a Platonic solid composed of eight equilateral triangles, four of which meet at each vertex. Regular octahedra occur in nature as crystal structures. An octahedron, more generally, can be any eight-sided polyh ...
, whose vertices lie on the sphere of Venus, which is in turn tangent to a regular icosahedron, within the sphere of Earth, within a regular dodecahedron, within the sphere of Mars, within a regular tetrahedron, within the sphere of Jupiter, within a cube, within the sphere of Saturn. In fact the orbits are not circles but ellipses (as Kepler himself later showed), and these relations are only approximate.


Construction

An elementary way to construct is using its Net (polyhedron), net, an arrangement of edge-joining polygons, constructing a polyhedron by connecting along the edges of those polygons. Eleven nets for the cube are shown here. In analytic geometry, a cube may be constructed using the Cartesian coordinate systems. For a cube centered at the origin, with edges parallel to the axes and with an edge length of 2, the Cartesian coordinates of the vertices are (\pm 1, \pm 1, \pm 1) . Its interior consists of all points (x_0, x_1, x_2) with -1 < x_i < 1 for all i . A cube's surface with center (x_0, y_0, z_0) and edge length of 2a is the Locus (mathematics), locus of all points (x,y,z) such that \max\ = a. The cube is Hanner polytope, because it can be constructed by using Cartesian product of three line segments. Its dual polyhedron, the regular octahedron, is constructed by direct sum of three line segments.


Representation


As a graph

According to Steinitz's theorem, the Graph (discrete mathematics), graph can be represented as the Skeleton (topology), skeleton of a polyhedron; roughly speaking, a framework of a polyhedron. Such a graph has two properties: Planar graph, planar (the edges of a graph are connected to every vertex without crossing other edges), and k-vertex-connected graph, 3-connected (whenever a graph with more than three vertices, and two of the vertices are removed, the edges remain connected). The skeleton of a cube can be represented as the graph, and it is called the cubical graph, a Platonic graph. It has the same number of vertices and edges as the cube, twelve vertices and eight edges. The cubical graph is also classified as a prism graph, resembling the skeleton of a cuboid. The cubical graph is a special case of hypercube graph or cube—denoted as Q_n —because it can be constructed by using the operation known as the
Cartesian product of graphs In graph theory, the Cartesian product of graphs and is a graph such that: * the vertex set of is the Cartesian product ; and * two vertices and are adjacent in if and only if either ** and is adjacent to in , or ** and is adjace ...
: it involves two graphs connecting the pair of vertices with an edge to form a new graph. In the case of the cubical graph, it is the product of two Q_2 ; roughly speaking, it is a graph resembling a square. In other words, the cubical graph is constructed by connecting each vertex of two squares with an edge. Notationally, the cubical graph is Q_3 . Like any hypercube graph, it has a Cycle (graph theory), cycle visits Hamiltonian path, every vertex exactly once, and it is also an example of a unit distance graph. The cubical graph is bipartite graph, bipartite, meaning every Independent set (graph theory), independent set of four vertices can be Disjoint set, disjoint and the edges connected in those sets. However, every vertex in one set cannot connect all vertices in the second, so this bipartite graph is not complete bipartite graph, complete. It is an example of both crown graph and bipartite Kneser graph.


In orthogonal projection

An object illuminated by parallel rays of light casts a shadow on a plane perpendicular to those rays, called an Orthographic projection, orthogonal projection. A polyhedron is considered Equiprojective polyhedra, equiprojective if, for some position of the light, its orthogonal projection is a regular polygon. The cube is equiprojective because, if the light is parallel to one of the four lines joining a vertex to the opposite vertex, its projection is a regular hexagon.


As a configuration matrix

The cube can be represented as Platonic solid#As a configuration, configuration matrix. A configuration matrix is a Matrix (mathematics), matrix in which the rows and columns correspond to the elements of a polyhedron as in the vertices, edges, and faces. The Main diagonal, diagonal of a matrix denotes the number of each element that appears in a polyhedron, whereas the non-diagonal of a matrix denotes the number of the column's elements that occur in or at the row's element. As mentioned above, the cube has eight vertices, twelve edges, and six faces; each element in a matrix's diagonal is denoted as 8, 12, and 6. The first column of the middle row indicates that there are two vertices in (i.e., at the extremes of) each edge, denoted as 2; the middle column of the first row indicates that three edges meet at each vertex, denoted as 3. The following matrix is: \begin\begin8 & 3 & 3 \\ 2 & 12 & 2 \\ 4 & 4 & 6 \end\end


Related figures


Construction of polyhedra

The cube can appear in the construction of a polyhedron, and some of its types can be derived differently in the following: * When faceting a cube, meaning removing part of the polygonal faces without creating new vertices of a cube, the resulting polyhedron is the stellated octahedron. * The cube is non-composite polyhedron, meaning it is a convex polyhedron that cannot be separated into two or more regular polyhedra. The cube can be applied to construct a new convex polyhedron by attaching another. Attaching a square pyramid to each square face of a cube produces its Kleetope, a polyhedron known as the tetrakis hexahedron. Suppose one and two equilateral square pyramids are attached to their square faces. In that case, they are the construction of an elongated square pyramid and elongated square bipyramid respectively, the Johnson solid's examples. * Each of the cube's vertices can be Truncation (geometry), truncated, and the resulting polyhedron is the Archimedean solid, the truncated cube. When its edges are truncated, it is a rhombicuboctahedron. Relatedly, the rhombicuboctahedron can also be constructed by separating the cube's faces and then spreading away, after which adding other triangular and square faces between them; this is known as the "expanded cube". Similarly, it is constructed by the cube's dual, the regular octahedron. * The barycentric subdivision of a cube (or its dual, the regular octahedron) is the disdyakis dodecahedron, a Catalan solid. * The corner region of a cube can also be truncated by a plane (e.g., spanned by the three neighboring vertices), resulting in a trirectangular tetrahedron. * The snub cube is an Archimedean solid that can be constructed by separating away the cube square's face, and filling their gaps with twisted angle equilateral triangles, a process known as Snub (geometry), snub. The cube can be constructed with six square pyramids, tiling space by attaching their apices. In some cases, this produces the rhombic dodecahedron circumscribing a cube.


Polycubes

Polycube is a polyhedron in which the faces of many cubes are attached. Analogously, it can be interpreted as the polyominoes in three-dimensional space. When four cubes are stacked vertically, and the other four are attached to the second-from-top cube of the stack, the resulting polycube is Dali cross, after Salvador Dali. In addition to popular cultures, the Dali cross is a tile space polyhedron, which can be represented as the net of a
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 ...
. A tesseract is a cube analogous' four-dimensional space bounded by twenty-four squares and eight cubes.


Space-filling and honeycombs

Hilbert's third problem asked whether every two equal-volume polyhedra could always be dissected into polyhedral pieces and reassembled into each other. If it were, then the volume of any polyhedron could be defined axiomatically as the volume of an equivalent cube into which it could be reassembled. Max Dehn solved this problem in an invention Dehn invariant, answering that not all polyhedra can be reassembled into a cube. It showed that two equal volume polyhedra should have the same Dehn invariant, except for the two tetrahedra whose Dehn invariants were different. The cube has a Dehn invariant of zero. This indicates the cube is applied for
honeycomb A honeycomb is a mass of Triangular prismatic honeycomb#Hexagonal prismatic honeycomb, hexagonal prismatic cells built from beeswax by honey bees in their beehive, nests to contain their brood (eggs, larvae, and pupae) and stores of honey and pol ...
. More strongly, the cube is a Space-filling polyhedron, space-filling tile in three-dimensional space in which the construction begins by attaching a polyhedron onto its faces without leaving a gap. The cube is a
plesiohedron In geometry, a plesiohedron is a special kind of space-filling polyhedron, defined as the Voronoi cell of a symmetric Delone set. Three-dimensional Euclidean space can be completely filled by copies of any one of these shapes, with no overlaps. The ...
, a special kind of space-filling polyhedron that can be defined as the Voronoi cell of a symmetric Delone set. The plesiohedra include the parallelohedra, which can be Translation (geometry), translated without rotating to fill a space in which each face of any of its copies is attached to a like face of another copy. There are five kinds of parallelohedra, one of which is the cuboid. Every three-dimensional parallelohedron is
zonohedron In geometry, a zonohedron is a convex polyhedron that is point symmetry, centrally symmetric, every face of which is a polygon that is centrally symmetric (a zonogon). Any zonohedron may equivalently be described as the Minkowski addition, Minkows ...
, a centrally symmetric polyhedron whose faces are Zonogon, centrally symmetric polygons. In the case of cube, it can be represented as the Cell (geometry), cell. Some honeycombs have cubes as the only cells; one example is cubic honeycomb, the only regular honeycomb in Euclidean three-dimensional space, having four cubes around each edge.


Miscellaneous

Compound of cubes is the polyhedral compounds in which the cubes share the same centre. They belong to the uniform polyhedron compound, meaning they are polyhedral compounds whose constituents are identical (although possibly enantiomorphous) uniform polyhedra, in an arrangement that is also uniform. Respectively, the list of compounds enumerated by in the seventh to ninth uniform compounds for the compound of six cubes with rotational freedom, Compound of three cubes, three cubes, and five cubes. Two compounds, consisting of compound of two cubes, two and three cubes were found in M. C. Escher, Escher's wood engraving print Stars (M. C. Escher), ''Stars'' and Max Brückner's book ''Vielecke und Vielflache''. The spherical cube represents the spherical polyhedron, which can be modeled by the Arc (geometry), arc of great circles, creating bounds as the edges of a spherical polygon, spherical square. Hence, the spherical cube consists of six spherical squares with 120° interior angles on each vertex. It has vector equilibrium, meaning that the distance from the centroid and each vertex is the same as the distance from that and each edge. Its dual is the spherical octahedron. The topological object 3-torus, three-dimensional torus is a topological space defined to be homeomorphic to the Cartesian product of three circles. It can be represented as a three-dimensional model of the cube shape.


See also

* Bhargava cube, a configuration to study the law of binary quadratic form and other such forms, of which the cube's vertices represent the integer. * Chazelle polyhedron, a notched opposite faces of a cube. * Cubism, an art movement of revolutionized painting and the visual arts. * Hemicube (geometry), Hemicube, an abstract polyhedron produced by identifying opposite faces of a cube * Squaring the square's three-dimensional analogue, cubing the cube


References


External links

*
Cube: Interactive Polyhedron Model


with interactive animation
Cube
(Robert Webb's site) {{Authority control Cubes, Cuboids Elementary shapes Platonic solids Prismatoid polyhedra Space-filling polyhedra Zonohedra