Many polyhedra are constructed from the regular icosahedron. For example, most of the Kepler–Poinsot polyhedron is constructed by faceting. Some of the Johnson solids can be constructed by removing the pentagonal pyramids. The regular icosahedron has many relations with other Platonic solids, one of them is the regular dodecahedron as its dual polyhedron and has the historical background on the comparison mensuration. It also has many relations with other polytopes.
The appearance of regular icosahedron can be found in nature, such as the virus with icosahedral-shaped shells and radiolarians. Other applications of the regular icosahedron are the usage of its net in cartography, twenty-sided dice that may have been found in ancient times and role-playing games.
Another way to construct it is by putting two points on each surface of a cube. In each face, draw a segment line between the midpoints of two opposite edges and locate two points with the golden ratio distance from each midpoint. These twelve vertices describe the three mutually perpendicular planes, with edges drawn between each of them.[3] Because of the constructions above, the regular icosahedron is Platonic solid, a family of polyhedra with regular faces. A polyhedron with only equilateral triangles as faces is called a deltahedron. There are only eight different convex deltahedra, one of which is the regular icosahedron.[4]
The regular icosahedron can also be constructed starting from a regular octahedron. All triangular faces of a regular octahedron are breaking, twisting at a certain angle, and filling up with other equilateral triangles. This process is known as snub, and the regular icosahedron is also known as snub octahedron.[5]
One possible system of Cartesian coordinate for the vertices of a regular icosahedron, giving the edge length 2, is:
where denotes the golden ratio.[6]
Properties
Mensuration
The insphere of a convex polyhedron is a sphere inside the polyhedron, touching every face. The circumsphere of a convex polyhedron is a sphere that contains the polyhedron and touches every vertex. The midsphere of a convex polyhedron is a sphere tangent to every edge. Therefore, given that the edge length of a regular icosahedron, the radius of insphere (inradius) , the radius of circumsphere (circumradius) , and the radius of midsphere (midradius) are, respectively:[7]
The surface area of a polyhedron is the sum of the areas of its faces. Therefore, the surface area of a regular icosahedron is 20 times that of each of its equilateral triangle faces. The volume of a regular icosahedron can be obtained as 20 times that of a pyramid whose base is one of its faces and whose apex is the icosahedron's center; or as the sum of two uniform pentagonal pyramids and a pentagonal antiprism. The expressions of both are:[8]
A problem dating back to the ancient Greeks is determining which of two shapes has a larger volume, an icosahedron inscribed in a sphere, or a dodecahedron inscribed in the same sphere. The problem was solved by Hero, Pappus, and Fibonacci, among others.[9]Apollonius of Perga discovered the curious result that the ratio of volumes of these two shapes is the same as the ratio of their surface areas.[10] Both volumes have formulas involving the golden ratio, but taken to different powers.[11] As it turns out, the icosahedron occupies less of the sphere's volume (60.54%) than the dodecahedron (66.49%).[12]
The dihedral angle of a regular icosahedron can be calculated by adding the angle of pentagonal pyramids with regular faces and a pentagonal antiprism. The dihedral angle of a pentagonal antiprism and pentagonal pyramid between two adjacent triangular faces is approximately 38.2°. The dihedral angle of a pentagonal antiprism between pentagon-to-triangle is 100.8°, and the dihedral angle of a pentagonal pyramid between the same faces is 37.4°. Therefore, for the regular icosahedron, the dihedral angle between two adjacent triangles, on the edge where the pentagonal pyramid and pentagonal antiprism are attached is 37.4° + 100.8° = 138.2°.[13]
The rotational symmetry group of the regular icosahedron is isomorphic to the alternating group on five letters. This non-abeliansimple group is the only non-trivial normal subgroup of the symmetric group on five letters. Since the Galois group of the general quintic equation is isomorphic to the symmetric group on five letters, and this normal subgroup is simple and non-abelian, the general quintic equation does not have a solution in radicals. The proof of the Abel–Ruffini theorem uses this simple fact, and Felix Klein wrote a book that made use of the theory of icosahedral symmetries to derive an analytical solution to the general quintic equation.[14]
The full symmetry group of the icosahedron (including reflections) is known as the full icosahedral group. It is isomorphic to the product of the rotational symmetry group and the group of size two, which is generated by the reflection through the center of the icosahedron.
Icosahedral graph
Every Platonic graph, including the icosahedral graph, is a polyhedral graph. This means that they are planar graphs, graphs that can be drawn in the plane without crossing its edges; and they are 3-vertex-connected, meaning that the removal of any two of its vertices leaves a connected subgraph. According to Steinitz theorem, the icosahedral graph endowed with these heretofore properties represents the skeleton of a regular icosahedron.[15]
The icosahedral graph is Hamiltonian, meaning that it contains a Hamiltonian cycle, or a cycle that visits each vertex exactly once.[16]
Related polyhedra
In other Platonic solids
Aside from comparing the mensuration between the regular icosahedron and regular dodecahedron, they are dual to each other. An icosahedron can be inscribed in a dodecahedron by placing its vertices at the face centers of the dodecahedron, and vice versa.[17]
An icosahedron can be inscribed in an octahedron by placing its 12 vertices on the 12 edges of the octahedron such that they divide each edge into its two golden sections. Because the golden sections are unequal, there are five different ways to do this consistently, so five disjoint icosahedra can be inscribed in each octahedron.[18]
An icosahedron of edge length can be inscribed in a unit-edge-length cube by placing six of its edges (3 orthogonal opposite pairs) on the square faces of the cube, centered on the face centers and parallel or perpendicular to the square's edges.[19] Because there are five times as many icosahedron edges as cube faces, there are five ways to do this consistently, so five disjoint icosahedra can be inscribed in each cube. The edge lengths of the cube and the inscribed icosahedron are in the golden ratio.[20]
The faces of the icosahedron extended outwards as planes intersect, defining regions in space as shown by this stellation diagram of the intersections in a single plane.
A Johnson solid is a polyhedron whose faces are all regular, but which is not uniform. This means the Johnson solids do not include the Archimedean solids, the Catalan solids, the prisms, or the antiprisms. Some of them are constructed involving the removal of the part of a regular icosahedron, a process known as diminishment. They are gyroelongated pentagonal pyramid, metabidiminished icosahedron, and tridiminished icosahedron, which remove one, two, and three pentagonal pyramids from the icosahedron, respectively.[2] The similar dissected regular icosahedron has 2 adjacent vertices diminished, leaving two trapezoidal faces, and a bifastigium has 2 opposite sets of vertices removed and 4 trapezoidal faces.
The unit-radius 600-cell has tetrahedral cells of edge length , 20 of which meet at each vertex to form an icosahedral pyramid (a 4-pyramid with an icosahedron as its base). Thus the 600-cell contains 120 icosahedra of edge length . The 600-cell also contains unit-edge-length cubes and unit-edge-length octahedra as interior features formed by its unit-length chords. In the unit-radius 120-cell (another regular 4-polytope which is both the dual of the 600-cell and a compound of 5 600-cells) we find all three kinds of inscribed icosahedra (in a dodecahedron, in an octahedron, and in a cube).
A semiregular 4-polytope, the snub 24-cell, has icosahedral cells.
Relations to other uniform polytopes
As mentioned above, the regular icosahedron is unique among the Platonic solids in possessing a dihedral angle is approximately . Thus, just as hexagons have angles not less than 120° and cannot be used as the faces of a convex regular polyhedron because such a construction would not meet the requirement that at least three faces meet at a vertex and leave a positive defect for folding in three dimensions, icosahedra cannot be used as the cells of a convex regular polychoron because, similarly, at least three cells must meet at an edge and leave a positive defect for folding in four dimensions (in general for a convex polytope in n dimensions, at least three facets must meet at a peak and leave a positive defect for folding in n-space). However, when combined with suitable cells having smaller dihedral angles, icosahedra can be used as cells in semi-regular polychora (for example the snub 24-cell), just as hexagons can be used as faces in semi-regular polyhedra (for example the truncated icosahedron). Finally, non-convex polytopes do not carry the same strict requirements as convex polytopes, and icosahedra are indeed the cells of the icosahedral 120-cell, one of the ten non-convex regular polychora.
There are distortions of the icosahedron that, while no longer regular, are nevertheless vertex-uniform. These are invariant under the same rotations as the tetrahedron, and are somewhat analogous to the snub cube and snub dodecahedron, including some forms which are chiral and some with -symmetry, i.e. have different planes of symmetry from the tetrahedron.
Appearances
Twenty-sided dice from Ptolemaic of Egypt, inscribed with Greek letters at the faces.
The Scattergories twenty-sided die, excluding the six letters Q, U, V, X, Y, and Z.
Dice are the most common objects using different polyhedra, one of them being the regular icosahedron. The twenty-sided die was found in many ancient times. One example is the die from the Ptolemaic of Egypt, which later used Greek letters inscribed on the faces in the period of Greece and Rome.[22]
Another example was found in the treasure of Tipu Sultan, which was made out of gold and with numbers written on each face.[23] In several roleplaying games, such as Dungeons & Dragons, the twenty-sided die (labeled as d20) is commonly used in determining success or failure of an action. It may be numbered from "0" to "9" twice, in which form it usually serves as a ten-sided die (d10); most modern versions are labeled from "1" to "20".[24]Scattergories is another board game in which the player names the category entires on a card within a given set time. The naming of such categories is initially with the letters contained in every twenty-sided dice.[25]
Dymaxion map, created by the net of a regular icosahedron
The regular icosahedron may also appear in many fields of science as follows:
In virology, herpes virus have icosahedral shells. The outer protein shell of HIV is enclosed in a regular icosahedron, as is the head of a typical myovirus.[26] Several species of radiolarians discovered by Ernst Haeckel, described its shells as the like-shaped various regular polyhedra; one of which is Circogonia icosahedra, whose skeleton is shaped like a regular icosahedron.[27]
In cartography, R. Buckminster Fuller used the net of a regular icosahedron to create a map known as Dymaxion map, by subdividing the net into triangles, followed by calculating the grid on the Earth's surface, and transferring the results from the sphere to the polyhedron. This projection was created during the time that Fuller realized that the Greenland is smaller than South America.[31]
In the Thomson problem, concerning the minimum-energy configuration of charged particles on a sphere, and for the Tammes problem of constructing a spherical code maximizing the smallest distance among the points, the minimum solution known for places the points at the vertices of a regular icosahedron, inscribed in a sphere. This configuration is proven optimal for the Tammes problem, but a rigorous solution to this instance of the Thomson problem is unknown.[32]
Sketch of a regular icosahedron by Johannes Kepler
As mentioned above, the regular icosahedron is one of the five Platonic solids. The regular polyhedra have been known since antiquity, but are named after Plato who, in his Timaeus dialogue, identified these with the five elements, whose elementary units were attributed these shapes: fire (tetrahedron), air (octahedron), water (icosahedron), earth (cube) and the shape of the universe as a whole (dodecahedron). Euclid's Elements defined the Platonic solids and solved the problem of finding the ratio of the circumscribed sphere's diameter to the edge length.[33] Following their identification with the elements by Plato, Johannes Kepler in his Harmonices Mundi sketched each of them, in particular, the regular icosahedron.[34] In his Mysterium Cosmographicum, he also proposed a model of the Solar System based on the placement of Platonic solids in a concentric sequence of increasing radius of the inscribed and circumscribed spheres whose radii gave the distance of the six known planets from the common center. The ordering of the solids, from innermost to outermost, consisted of: regular octahedron, regular icosahedron, regular dodecahedron, regular tetrahedron, and cube.[35]
^MacLean 2007, p. 43–44; Coxeter 1973, Table I(i), pp. 292–293. See column "", where is Coxeter's notation for the midradius, also noting that Coxeter uses as the edge length (see p. 2).
^Borovik 2006, pp. 8–9, §5. How to draw an icosahedron on a blackboard.
^Reciprocally, the edge length of a cube inscribed in a dodecahedron is in the golden ratio to the dodecahedron's edge length. The cube's edges lie in pentagonal face planes of the dodecahedron as regular pentagon diagonals, which are always in the golden ratio to the regular pentagon's edge. When a cube is inscribed in a dodecahedron and an icosahedron is inscribed in the cube, the dodecahedron and icosahedron that do not share any vertices have the same edge length.
Borovik, Alexandre (2006). "Coxeter Theory: The Cognitive Aspects". In Davis, Chandler; Ellers, Erich (eds.). The Coxeter Legacy. Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society. pp. 17–43. ISBN978-0821837221.
Jones, Daniel (2003) [1917]. Roach, Peter; Hartmann, James; Setter, Jane (eds.). English Pronouncing Dictionary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN3-12-539683-2.
MacLean, Kenneth J. M. (2007). A Geometric Analysis of the Platonic Solids and Other Semi-Regular Polyhedra. Loving Healing Press. ISBN978-1-932690-99-6.
Minas-Nerpel, Martina (2007). "A Demotic Inscribed Icosahedron from Dakhleh Oasis". The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 93 (1): 137–148. doi:10.1177/030751330709300107. JSTOR40345834.
Shavinina, Larisa V. (2013). The Routledge International Handbook of Innovation Education. Routledge. ISBN978-0-203-38714-6.
Silvester, John R. (2001). Geometry: Ancient and Modern. Oxford University Publisher.
Simmons, George F. (2007). Calculus Gems: Brief Lives and Memorable Mathematics. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN9780883855614.
Steinmitz, Nicole F.; Manchester, Marianne (2011). Viral Nanoparticles: Tools for Material Science and Biomedicine. Pan Stanford Publisher. ISBN978-981-4267-94-6.
Fashion OneDiluncurkan8 April 2010PemilikBigfoot EntertainmentSloganAlways First.NegaraAmerika SerikatBahasaInggrisKantor pusatLos Angeles, London, New YorkSitus webwww.fashionone.com Fashion One adalah saluran televisi Amerika Serikat yang khusus menayangkan acara tentang fesyen. Stasiun TV ini mulai dirilis pada tanggal 8 April 2010.[1] Saluran TV ini didistribusikan melalui televisi satelit, televisi kabel, media lainnya seperti IPTV dan Internet. Fashion One berpusat di Los Angele...
Artikel ini perlu dikembangkan agar dapat memenuhi kriteria sebagai entri Wikipedia.Bantulah untuk mengembangkan artikel ini. Jika tidak dikembangkan, artikel ini akan dihapus.Institut Teknologi Adhi Tama SurabayaMotoGo Green, Go International, Go TogetherJenisPerguruan tinggi swastaDidirikan31 Mei 1963RektorDr. Mat Syai’in, S.T., M.T., Ph.D.Staf akademikFakultas Teknologi Industri Fakultas Teknik Sipil dan Perencanaan Fakultas Teknik Elektro dan Teknologi InformasiLokasiSurabaya, Jawa Timu...
Amazing GraceHalaman 53 dari Olney Hymns menunjukkan bait pertama dari himne tersebut dimulai dengan Amazing Grace!GenreHimne KristenTeksJohn NewtonMeter8.6.8.6 (Common metre)Sampel audioPenampilan oleh Band Marinir Amerika Serikat (vokalis dengan iringan band)berkasbantuan Amazing Grace adalah sebuah himne Kristen yang dipublikasikan pada tahun 1779, ditulis pada tahun 1772 oleh pendeta dan penyair Anglikan Inggris John Newton (1725–1807). Lagu ini adalah himne yang sangat populer, terutam...
العلاقات اليونانية الشمال مقدونية اليونان شمال مقدونيا اليونان شمال مقدونيا تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات اليونانية الشمال مقدونية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين اليونان وشمال مقدونيا.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة...
2016 WWE Network event and tournament Cruiserweight ClassicPromotional poster for the live finale featuring the Cruiserweight Classic trophyPromotionWWEDate June 23, 2016 July 14, 2016 August 26, 2016 September 14, 2016 CityWinter Park, FloridaVenueFull Sail UniversityWWE Network event chronology ← PreviousBacklash Next →Clash of Champions The Cruiserweight Classic, formerly the Global Cruiserweight Series, was a professional wrestling tournament and WWE Network event produced b...
Pour les articles homonymes, voir Staël. Germaine de StaëlPortrait de Germaine de Staël par Marie-Éléonore Godefroid d'après François Gérard, château de Versailles.BiographieNaissance 22 avril 1766Paris, Royaume de FranceDécès 14 juillet 1817 (à 51 ans)Paris, Royaume de FranceSépulture Château de CoppetNom de naissance Anne-Louise Germaine NeckerSurnom Madame de StaëlNationalités République de Genèveroyaume de FranceActivité écrivainePère Jacques NeckerMère S...
German physician and ornithologist Gustav HartlaubBorn(1814-11-08)8 November 1814Bremen, GermanyDied29 November 1900(1900-11-29) (aged 86)EducationUniversity of GöttingenKnown forWork on exotic birdsScientific careerFieldsPhysician and ornithologistAuthor abbrev. (zoology)Hartlaub Karel Johan Gustav Hartlaub (8 November 1814 – 29 November 1900) was a German physician and ornithologist. Hartlaub was born in Bremen, and studied at Bonn and Berlin before graduating in medicine ...
Les Jeux de la Lusophonie (en portugais : Jogos da Lusofonia) sont une compétition multisports organisée par l'Association des comités olympiques de langue officielle portugaise (en portugais : Associação dos Comités Olímpicos de Língua Oficial Portuguesa; ACOLOP) créée le 8 juin 2004. Les membres fondateurs de l'ACOLOP sont : l'Angola, le Brésil, le Cap-Vert, la Guinée-Bissau, Macao (Chine), le Mozambique, le Portugal, Sao Tomé-et-Principe et le Timor oriental. Me...
n-Butylamine Names Preferred IUPAC name Butan-1-amine Other names 1-Aminobutane1-ButanamineMonobutylamine Identifiers CAS Number 109-73-9 Y 3D model (JSmol) Interactive image Abbreviations NBA Beilstein Reference 605269 ChEBI CHEBI:43799 N ChEMBL ChEMBL13968 Y ChemSpider 7716 Y DrugBank DB03659 N ECHA InfoCard 100.003.364 EC Number 203-699-2 Gmelin Reference 1784 MeSH n-butylamine PubChem CID 8007 RTECS number EO29750002 UNII N2QV60B4WR N UN number 1125 CompTox ...
Copa América 2021CONMEBOL Copa América Brasil 2021 Competizione Copa América Sport Calcio Edizione 47ª Organizzatore CONMEBOL Date 13 giugno - 10 luglio 2021[1] Luogo Brasile(4 città) Partecipanti 10 Impianto/i 5 stadi Risultati Vincitore Argentina(15º titolo) Secondo Brasile Terzo Colombia Quarto Perù Statistiche Miglior giocatore Lionel Messi Miglior marcatore Luis Díaz Lionel Messi (4) Miglior portiere Emiliano Martínez Incontri disputati 28 Gol ...
This article is about the song by Joe Liggins. For the pianist nicknamed The Honeydripper, see Roosevelt Sykes. For the album by Roosevelt Sykes, see The Honeydripper (Roosevelt Sykes album). For the album by Jack McDuff, see The Honeydripper (Jack McDuff album). Honeydripper redirects here. For the film, see Honeydripper (film). 1945 song by Joe Liggins and His HoneydrippersThe HoneydripperSong by Joe Liggins and His HoneydrippersReleasedApril 1945RecordedApril 20, 1945LabelExclusive Records...
16th episode of the 1st season of The Twilight Zone The Hitch-HikerThe Twilight Zone episodeInger Stevens in a scene from the episodeEpisode no.Season 1Episode 16Directed byAlvin GanzerTeleplay byRod SerlingBased onThe Hitch-Hikerby Lucille FletcherFeatured musicStock, featuring Bernard Herrmann's score for the original radio version of The Hitch-HikerProduction code173-3612Original air dateJanuary 22, 1960 (1960-01-22)Guest appearances Inger Stevens as Nan Adams Leonard S...
American lynching victim This article is written like a personal reflection, personal essay, or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor's personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic. Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style. (November 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Josefa SegoviaArtist's impression of Segovia's hanging, from William Downie's Hunting for Gold, published 1893LocationDownieville, CaliforniaCoordinates39°3...
American Christian rock band For the album, see Building 429 (album). This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Building 429 – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Building 429Building 429 Performing in 2013Background informationOriginF...