Parallelogon

A parallelogon is a polygon such that images of the polygon will tile the plane when fitted together along entire sides, without rotation.[1]

A parallelogon is constructed by two or three pairs of parallel line segments. The vertices and edges on the interior of the hexagon are suppressed.
There are five Bravais lattices in two dimensions, related to the parallelogon tessellations by their five symmetry variations.

A parallelogon must have an even number of sides and opposite sides must be equal in length and parallel (hence the name). A less obvious corollary is that all parallelogons have either four or six sides;[1] a four-sided parallelogon is called a parallelogram. In general a parallelogon has 180-degree rotational symmetry around its center.

The faces of a parallelohedron are parallelogons.

Two polygonal types

Quadrilateral and hexagonal parallelogons each have varied geometric symmetric forms. In general they all have central inversion symmetry, order 2. Every convex parallelogon is a zonogon, but hexagonal parallelogons enable the possibility of nonconvex polygons.

SidesExamplesNameSymmetry
4 ParallelogramZ2, order 2
Rectangle & rhombusDih2, order 4
SquareDih4, order 8
6 Elongated
parallelogram
Z2, order 2
Elongated
rhombus
Dih2, order 4
Regular
hexagon
Dih6, order 12

Geometric variations

A parallelogram can tile the plane as a distorted square tiling while a hexagonal parallelogon can tile the plane as a distorted regular hexagonal tiling.

Parallelogram tilings
1 length 2 lengths
Right Skew Right Skew

Square
p4m (*442)

Rhombus
cmm (2*22)

Rectangle
pmm (*2222)

Parallelogram
p2 (2222)
Hexagonal parallelogon tilings
1 length 2 lengths 3 lengths
Regular hexagon
p6m (*632)
Elongated rhombus
cmm (2*22)
Elongated parallelogram
p2 (2222)


References

  1. Aleksandr Danilovich Alexandrov (2005) [1950]. Convex Polyhedra. Translated by N.S. Dairbekov; S.S. Kutateladze; A.B. Sosinsky. Springer. p. 351. ISBN 3-540-23158-7. ISSN 1439-7382.
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