Stereohedron
In geometry and crystallography, a stereohedron is a convex polyhedron that fills space isohedrally, meaning that the symmetries of the tiling take any copy of the stereohedron to any other copy.
Two-dimensional analogues to the stereohedra are called planigons. Higher dimensional polytopes can also be stereohedra, while they would more accurately be called stereotopes.
Plesiohedra
[edit]A subset of stereohedra are called plesiohedrons, defined as the Voronoi cells of a symmetric Delone set.
Parallelohedrons are plesiohedra which are space-filling by translation only. Edges here are colored as parallel vectors.
cube | hexagonal prism | rhombic dodecahedron | elongated dodecahedron | truncated octahedron |
Other periodic stereohedra
[edit]The catoptric tessellation contain stereohedra cells. Dihedral angles are integer divisors of 180°, and are colored by their order. The first three are the fundamental domains of , , and symmetry, represented by Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams: , and . is a half symmetry of , and is a quarter symmetry.
Any space-filling stereohedra with symmetry elements can be dissected into smaller identical cells which are also stereohedra. The name modifiers below, half, quarter, and eighth represent such dissections.
Faces | 4 | 5 | 6 | 8 | 12 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Type | Tetrahedra | Square pyramid | Triangular bipyramid | Cube | Octahedron | Rhombic dodecahedron | |||||||
Images | 1/48 (1) |
1/24 (2) |
1/12 (4) |
1/12 (4) |
1/24 (2) |
1/6 (8) |
1/6 (8) |
1/12 (4) |
1/4 (12) |
1 (48) |
1/2 (24) |
1/3 (16) |
2 (96) |
Symmetry (order) |
C1 1 |
C1v 2 |
D2d 4 |
C1v 2 |
C1v 2 |
C4v 8 |
C2v 4 |
C2v 4 |
C3v 6 |
Oh 48 |
D3d 12 |
D4h 16 |
Oh 48 |
Honeycomb | Eighth pyramidille |
Triangular pyramidille |
Oblate tetrahedrille |
Half pyramidille |
Square quarter pyramidille |
Pyramidille |
Half oblate octahedrille |
Quarter oblate octahedrille |
Quarter cubille |
Cubille |
Oblate cubille |
Oblate octahedrille |
Dodecahedrille |
Other convex polyhedra that are stereohedra but not parallelohedra nor plesiohedra include the gyrobifastigium.
Faces | 8 | 10 | 12 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Symmetry (order) |
D2d (8) | D4h (16) | ||
Images | ||||
Cell | Gyrobifastigium | Elongated gyrobifastigium |
Ten of diamonds | Elongated square bipyramid |
References
[edit]- Ivanov, A. B. (2001) [1994], "Stereohedron", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
- B. N. Delone, N. N. Sandakova, Theory of stereohedra Trudy Mat. Inst. Steklov., 64 (1961) pp. 28–51 (Russian)
- Goldberg, Michael Three Infinite Families of Tetrahedral Space-Fillers Journal of Combinatorial Theory A, 16, pp. 348–354, 1974.
- Goldberg, Michael The space-filling pentahedra, Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A Volume 13, Issue 3, November 1972, Pages 437-443 [1] PDF
- Goldberg, Michael The Space-filling Pentahedra II, Journal of Combinatorial Theory 17 (1974), 375–378. PDF
- Goldberg, Michael On the space-filling hexahedra Geom. Dedicata, June 1977, Volume 6, Issue 1, pp 99–108 [2] PDF
- Goldberg, Michael On the space-filling heptahedra Geometriae Dedicata, June 1978, Volume 7, Issue 2, pp 175–184 [3] PDF
- Goldberg, Michael Convex Polyhedral Space-Fillers of More than Twelve Faces. Geom. Dedicata 8, 491-500, 1979.
- Goldberg, Michael On the space-filling octahedra, Geometriae Dedicata, January 1981, Volume 10, Issue 1, pp 323–335 [4] PDF
- Goldberg, Michael On the Space-filling Decahedra. Structural Topology, 1982, num. Type 10-II PDF
- Goldberg, Michael On the space-filling enneahedra Geometriae Dedicata, June 1982, Volume 12, Issue 3, pp 297–306 [5] PDF