Leonardo polyhedron

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Short description: A polyhedron with many holes


Rhombicuboctahedron, one of the Leonardo da Vinci's geometrical shapes illustration in 1509 Divina proportione.

Leonardo polyhedron is a polyhedron with a Platonic solid's rotational symmetry and has genus g2. Here, a polyhedron is the unbounded 2-manifold embedded in three-dimensional Euclidean space. The polyhedron is named after Leonardo da Vinci, who illustrated geometrical shapes in Luca Pacioli's De divina proportione in three phases: drawing Platonic solids and Archimedean solids; replacing the edges of those solids by struts, forming a convex polygon, and this results in the first polyhedron with many genera; and placing each hole with the skeleton of a pyramid.[1]

Alicia Boole Stott discovered the first regular Leonardo polyhedron (its property has transitivity by the set consisting of vertex, edge, and face of a polyhedron). Similar to Leonardo's work, she began the construction with a four-dimensional polytope, projecting to a Schlegel diagram, and replacing its edges with quadrilateral-shaped struts.[2] Coxeter later discovered the regular skew polyhedron.[3] Felix Klein discovered the three genera.[4] Together with Robert Fricke, they found the five genera of Leonardo polyhedra.[5] Some colleagues further discovered the locally regular and the genus up to 14.[6]

Footnotes

  1. Bokowski (2022).
  2. Stott (1910); Bokowski (2022).
  3. Coxeter (1937).
  4. Klein (1879); Klein (1884).
  5. Klein & Fricke (1890).
  6. Gévay & Wills (2013); Bokowski (2022); Bokowski & H. (2025).

References

Further reading

  • Gevay, G.; Schulte, E.; Wills, J. M. (2014). "The regular Grünbaum polyhedron of genus 5". Advances in Geometry 14 (3): 465–482. doi:10.1515/advgeom-2013-0033.