Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Dual polyhedron
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Dual polytopes and tessellations== Duality can be generalized to ''n''-dimensional space and '''dual [[polytope]]s;''' in two dimensions these are called [[dual polygon]]s. The vertices of one polytope correspond to the (''n'' − 1)-dimensional elements, or facets, of the other, and the ''j'' points that define a (''j'' − 1)-dimensional element will correspond to ''j'' hyperplanes that intersect to give a (''n'' − ''j'')-dimensional element. The dual of an ''n''-dimensional tessellation or [[Honeycomb (geometry)|honeycomb]] can be defined similarly. In general, the facets of a polytope's dual will be the topological duals of the polytope's vertex figures. For the polar reciprocals of the [[regular polytope|regular]] and [[Uniform polytope|uniform]] polytopes, the dual facets will be polar reciprocals of the original's vertex figure. For example, in four dimensions, the vertex figure of the [[600-cell]] is the [[Regular icosahedron|icosahedron]]; the dual of the 600-cell is the [[120-cell]], whose facets are [[dodecahedron|dodecahedra]], which are the dual of the icosahedron. ===Self-dual polytopes and tessellations=== [[File:Kah 4 4.png|thumb|The [[square tiling]], {4,4}, is self-dual, as shown by these red and blue tilings]] [[File:Infinite-order apeirogonal tiling and dual.png|thumb|The [[Infinite-order apeirogonal tiling]], {∞,∞} in red, and its dual position in blue]] The primary class of self-dual polytopes are [[regular polytope]]s with [[palindromic]] [[Schläfli symbol]]s. All regular polygons, {a} are self-dual, [[polyhedron|polyhedra]] of the form {a,a}, [[4-polytope]]s of the form {a,b,a}, [[5-polytope]]s of the form {a,b,b,a}, etc. The self-dual regular polytopes are: * All [[regular polygon]]s, {a}. * Regular [[tetrahedron]]: {3,3} * In general, all regular ''n''-[[simplex]]es, {3,3,...,3} * The regular [[24-cell]] in 4 dimensions, {3,4,3}. * The [[great 120-cell]] {5,5/2,5} and the [[grand stellated 120-cell]] {5/2,5,5/2} The self-dual (infinite) regular Euclidean [[Honeycomb (geometry)|honeycombs]] are: * [[Apeirogon]]: {∞} * [[Square tiling]]: {4,4} * [[Cubic honeycomb]]: {4,3,4} * In general, all regular ''n''-dimensional Euclidean [[hypercubic honeycomb]]s: {4,3,...,3,4}. The self-dual (infinite) regular [[Coxeter diagram#Hyperbolic Coxeter groups|hyperbolic]] honeycombs are: * Compact hyperbolic tilings: [[Order-5 pentagonal tiling|{5,5}]], [[Order-6 hexagonal tiling|{6,6}]], ... {p,p}. * Paracompact hyperbolic tiling: [[Infinite-order apeirogonal tiling|{∞,∞}]] * Compact hyperbolic honeycombs: [[Icosahedral honeycomb|{3,5,3}]], [[Order-5 dodecahedral honeycomb|{5,3,5}]], and [[Order-5 120-cell honeycomb|{5,3,3,5}]] * Paracompact hyperbolic honeycombs: [[Triangular tiling honeycomb|{3,6,3}]], [[Order-6 hexagonal tiling honeycomb|{6,3,6}]], [[Order-4 square tiling honeycomb|{4,4,4}]], and [[16-cell honeycomb honeycomb|{3,3,4,3,3}]]
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)