Geodesic polyhedron

3 constructions for a {3,5+}6,0
A icosahedron and related symmetry polyhedra can be used to define a high geodesic polyhedron by dividing triangular faces into smaller triangles, and projecting all the new vertices onto a sphere. Higher order polygonal faces can be divided into triangles by adding new vertices centered on each face. The new faces on the sphere are not equilateral triangles, but they are approximately equal edge length. All vertices are valence-6 except 12 vertices which are valence 5.
Construction of {3,5+}3,3
Geodesic subdivisions can also be done from an augumented dodecahedron, dividing pentagons into triangles with a center point, and subdividing from that.
Construction of {3,5+}6,3
Chiral polyhedra with higher order polygonal faces can be augmented with central points and new triangle faces. Those triangles can then be further subdivided into smaller triangles for new geodesic polyhedra. All vertices are valence-6 except the 12 centered at the original vertices which are valence 5.
Construction of a mixed geodesic form
Geodesic subdivisions can also be done by augmented square faces, although the resulting triangles will be near right triangles rather than equilateral. This rhombicosidodecahedron example has 4 to 7 triangles around each vertex.

A geodesic polyhedron is a convex polyhedron made from triangles. They usually have icosahedral symmetry, such that they have 6 triangles at a vertex, except 12 vertices which have 5 triangles. They are the dual of corresponding Goldberg polyhedra with mostly hexagonal faces.

Geodesic polyhedra are a good approximation to a sphere for many purposes, and appear in many different contexts. The most well-known may be the geodesic domes designed by Buckminster Fuller, which geodesic polyhedra are named after. Geodesic grids used in geodesy also have the geometry of geodesic polyhedra. The capsids of some viruses have the shape of geodesic polyhedra,[1][2] and fullerene molecules have the shape of Goldberg polyhedra. Geodesic polyhedra are available as geometric primitives in the Blender 3D modeling software package, which calls them icospheres: they are an alternative to the UV sphere, having a more regular distribution of vertices than the UV sphere.[3][4] The Goldberg–Coxeter construction is an expansion of the concepts underlying geodesic polyhedra.

Geodesic notation

In Magnus Wenninger's Spherical models, polyhedra are given geodesic notation in the form {3,q+}b,c, where {3,q} is the Schläfli symbol for the regular polyhedron with triangular faces, and q-valence vertices. The + symbol indicates the valence of the vertices being increased. b,c represent a subdivision description, with 1,0 representing the base form. There are 3 symmetry classes of forms: {3,3+}1,0 for a tetrahedron, {3,4+}1,0 for a octahedron, and {3,5+}1,0 for a icosahedron.

The dual notation for Goldberg polyhedra is {q+,3}b,c, with valence-3 vertices, with q-gonal and hexagonal faces. There are 3 symmetry classes of forms: {3+,3}1,0 for a tetrahedron, {4+,3}1,0 for a cube, and {5+,3}1,0 for a dodecahedron.

Values for b,c are divided into 3 classes:

Class I (b=0 or c=0): {3,q+}b,0 or {3,q+}0,b represent a simple division with original edges being divided into b sub-edges.
Class II (b=c): {3,q+}b,b are easier to see from the dual polyhedron {q,3} with q-gonal faces first divided into triangles with a central point, and then all edges are divided into b sub-edges.
Class III: {3,q+}b,c have nonzero unequal values for b,c, and exist in chiral pairs. For b>c we can define it as a right-handed form, and c>b is a left-handed form.

Subdivisions in class III here do not line up simply with the original edges. The subgrids can be extracted by looking at a triangular tiling, positioning a large triangle on top of grid vertices and walking paths from one vertex b steps in one direction, and a turn, either clockwise or counterclockwise, and then another c steps to the next primary vertex.

For example, the icosahedron is {3,5+}1,0, and pentakis dodecahedron, {3,5+}1,1 is seen as a regular dodecahedron with pentagonal faces divided into 5 triangles.

The primary face of the subdivision is called a principal polyhedral triangle (PPT). Calculating a single PPT allows the entire figure to be created.

The frequency of a geodesic polyhedron is defined by the sum of ν = b + c. A harmonic is a subfrequency and can be any whole divisor of ν. Class II always have a harmonic of 2, since ν = 2b.

The triangulation number T = b2 + bc + c2. This number times the number of original faces expresses how many triangles the new polyhedron will have.

PPTs with frequency 8

Elements

The number of elements are specified by the triangulation number . Two different geodesic polyhedra may have the same number of elements, for instance, {3,5+}5,3 and {3,5+}7,0 both have T=49.

Symmetry Icosahedral Octahedral Tetrahedral
Base Icosahedron
{3,5} = {3,5+}1,0
Octahedron
{3,4} = {3,4+}1,0
Tetrahedron
{3,3} = {3,3+}1,0
Image
Symbol {3,5+}b,c {3,4+}b,c {3,3+}b,c
Vertices
Faces
Edges

Construction

Geodesic polyhedra are constructed by subdividing faces of simpler polyhedra, and then projecting the new vertices onto the surface of a sphere. A geodesic polyhedron has straight edges and flat faces that approximate a sphere, but it can also be made as a spherical polyhedron (a tessellation on a sphere) with true geodesic curved edges on the surface of a sphere. and spherical triangle faces.

Conwayu3I = (kt)I(k)tIktI
Image
Form 3-frequency
subdivided icosahedron
Kis truncated icosahedronGeodesic polyhedron (3,0)Spherical polyhedron

Relation to Goldberg polyhedra

Geodesic polyhedra are the dual of Goldberg polyhedra. Goldberg polyhedra are also related in that applying a kis operator (dividing faces triangles with a center point) creates new geodesic polyhedra, and truncating vertices of a geodesic polyhedron creates a new Goldberg polyhedron. For example, Goldberg G(2,1) kised, becomes {3,5+}4,1, and truncating that becomes G(6,3). And similarly {3,5+}2,1 truncated becomes G(4,1), and that kised becomes {3,5+}6,3.

Examples

Class I geodesic polyhedra
Frequency(1,0)(2,0)(3,0)(4,0)(5,0)(6,0)(7,0)(8,0)(m,0)
T1491625364964m2
Face
triangle
...
Icosahedral more
Octahedral more
Tetrahedral more
Class II geodesic polyhedra
Frequency(1,1)(2,2)(3,3)(4,4)(5,5)(6,6)(7,7)(8,8)(m,m)
T3122748751081471923m2
Face
triangle
...
Icosahedral more
Octahedral more
Tetrahedral more
Class III geodesic polyhedra
Frequency(1,2)(1,3)(2,3)(1,4)(2,4)(3,4)(1,5)(2,5)(m,n)
T713192128373139m2+mn+n2
Face
triangle
...
Icosahedral more
Octahedral more
Tetrahedral more

Spherical models

Magnus Wenninger's book Spherical Models explores these subdivisions in building polyhedron models. After explaining the construction of these models, he explained his usage of triangular grids to mark out patterns, with triangles colored or excluded in the models.[5]

Example model

An artistic model created by Father Magnus Wenninger called Order in Chaos, representing a chiral subset of triangles of a 16-frequency icosahedral geodesic sphere, {3,5+}16,0

A virtual copy showing icosahedral symmetry great circles. The 6-fold rotational symmetry is illusionary, not existing on the icosahedron itself.

A single icosahedral triangle with a 16-frequency subdivision

See also

References

  1. Caspar, D. L. D.; Klug, A. (1962). "Physical Principles in the Construction of Regular Viruses". Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 27: 1–24. doi:10.1101/sqb.1962.027.001.005. PMID 14019094.
  2. Coxeter, H.S.M. (1971). "Virus macromolecules and geodesic domes.". In Butcher, J.C. A spectrum of mathematics. Oxford University Press. pp. 98–107.
  3. "Mesh Primitives", Blender Reference Manual, Version 2.77, retrieved 2016-06-11 .
  4. https://blender.stackexchange.com/questions/72/what-is-the-difference-between-a-uv-sphere-and-an-icosphere. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. Spherical Models, pp. 150–159
  • Robert Williams The Geometrical Foundation of Natural Structure: A source book of Design, 1979, pp. 142–144, Figure 4-49,50,51 Custers of 12 spheres, 42 spheres, 92 spheres
  • Antony Pugh, Polyhedra: a visual approach, 1976, Chapter 6. The Geodesic Polyhedra of R. Buckminster Fuller and Related Polyhedra
  • Wenninger, Magnus (1979), Spherical Models, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-29432-4, MR 0552023, archived from the original on July 4, 2008 Reprinted by Dover 1999 ISBN 978-0-486-40921-4
  • Edward S. Popko, Divided spheres: Geodesics & the Orderly Subdivision of the Sphere (2012) Chapter 8 Subdivision schemas, 8.1 Geodesic Notation, 8.2 Triangulation number 8.3 Frequency and Harmonics 8.4 Grid Symmetry 8.5 Class I: Alternates and fords 8.5.1 Defining the Principal triangle 8.5.2 Edge Reference Points
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