Plesiohedron

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Short description: Type of space-filling polyhedron

In geometry, a plesiohedron is a special kind of space-filling polyhedron, defined as the Voronoi cell of a symmetric Delone set. Three-dimensional Euclidean space can be completely filled by copies of any one of these shapes, with no overlaps. The resulting honeycomb will have symmetries that take any copy of the plesiohedron to any other copy.

The plesiohedra include such well-known shapes as the cube, hexagonal prism, rhombic dodecahedron, and truncated octahedron. The largest number of faces that a plesiohedron can have is 38.

Definition

A 17-sided plesiohedron and its honeycomb, the Voronoi diagram of the Laves graph

A set [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] of points in Euclidean space is a Delone set if there exists a number [math]\displaystyle{ \varepsilon\gt 0 }[/math] such that every two points of [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] are at least at distance [math]\displaystyle{ \varepsilon }[/math] apart from each other and such that every point of space is within distance [math]\displaystyle{ 1/\varepsilon }[/math] of at least one point in [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math]. So [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] fills space, but its points never come too close to each other. For this to be true, [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] must be infinite. Additionally, the set [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] is symmetric (in the sense needed to define a plesiohedron) if, for every two points [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ q }[/math] of [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math], there exists a rigid motion of space that takes [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] to [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] to [math]\displaystyle{ q }[/math]. That is, the symmetries of [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] act transitively on [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math].[1]

The Voronoi diagram of any set [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] of points partitions space into regions called Voronoi cells that are nearer to one given point of [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] than to any other. When [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] is a Delone set, the Voronoi cell of each point [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] in [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] is a convex polyhedron. The faces of this polyhedron lie on the planes that perpendicularly bisect the line segments from [math]\displaystyle{ p }[/math] to other nearby points of [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math].[2]

When [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] is symmetric as well as being Delone, the Voronoi cells must all be congruent to each other, for the symmetries of [math]\displaystyle{ S }[/math] must also be symmetries of the Voronoi diagram. In this case, the Voronoi diagram forms a honeycomb in which there is only a single prototile shape, the shape of these Voronoi cells. This shape is called a plesiohedron. The tiling generated in this way is isohedral, meaning that it not only has a single prototile ("monohedral") but also that any copy of this tile can be taken to any other copy by a symmetry of the tiling.[1]

As with any space-filling polyhedron, the Dehn invariant of a plesiohedron is necessarily zero.[3]

Examples

The plesiohedra include the five parallelohedra. These are polyhedra that can tile space in such a way that every tile is symmetric to every other tile by a translational symmetry, without rotation. Equivalently, they are the Voronoi cells of lattices, as these are the translationally-symmetric Delone sets. Plesiohedra are a special case of the stereohedra, the prototiles of isohedral tilings more generally.[1] For this reason (and because Voronoi diagrams are also known as Dirichlet tesselations) they have also been called "Dirichlet stereohedra"[4]

There are only finitely many combinatorial types of plesiohedron. Notable individual plesiohedra include:

Many other plesiohedra are known. Two different ones with the largest known number of faces, 38, were discovered by crystallographer Peter Engel.[1][9] For many years the maximum number of faces of a plesiohedron was an open problem,[10][4] but analysis of the possible symmetries of three-dimensional space has shown that this number is at most 38.[11]

The Voronoi cells of points uniformly spaced on a helix fill space, are all congruent to each other, and can be made to have arbitrarily large numbers of faces.[12] However, the points on a helix are not a Delone set and their Voronoi cells are not bounded polyhedra.

A modern survey is given by Schmitt.[11]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Tilings with congruent tiles", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, New Series 3 (3): 951–973, 1980, doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1980-14827-2 .
  2. "Voronoi diagrams—a survey of a fundamental geometric data structure", ACM Computing Surveys 23 (3): 345–405, September 1991, doi:10.1145/116873.116880 . See especially section 1.2.1, "Regularly Placed Sites", pp. 354–355.
  3. "Polytopes that fill [math]\displaystyle{ \mathbb{R}^n }[/math] and scissors congruence", Discrete and Computational Geometry 13 (3–4): 573–583, 1995, doi:10.1007/BF02574064 .
  4. 4.0 4.1 Sabariego, Pilar (2011), "On the number of facets of three-dimensional Dirichlet stereohedra IV: quarter cubic groups", Beiträge zur Algebra und Geometrie 52 (2): 237–263, doi:10.1007/s13366-011-0010-5 .
  5. Erdahl, R. M. (1999), "Zonotopes, dicings, and Voronoi's conjecture on parallelohedra", European Journal of Combinatorics 20 (6): 527–549, doi:10.1006/eujc.1999.0294 . Voronoi conjectured that all tilings of higher dimensional spaces by translates of a single convex polytope are combinatorially equivalent to Voronoi tilings, and Erdahl proves this in the special case of zonotopes. But as he writes (p. 429), Voronoi's conjecture for dimensions at most four was already proven by Delaunay. For the classification of three-dimensional parallelohedra into these five types, see (Grünbaum Shephard).
  6. Pugh, Anthony (1976), "Close-packing polyhedra", Polyhedra: a visual approach, University of California Press, Berkeley, Calif.-London, pp. 48–50, https://books.google.com/books?id=IDDxpYQTR7kC&pg=PA48 .
  7. "Combinatorial and metric theory of planigons", Trudy Matematicheskogo Instituta Imeni V. A. Steklova 148: 109–140, 275, 1978 .
  8. Schoen, Alan H. (June–July 2008), "On the graph (10,3)-a", Notices of the American Mathematical Society 55 (6): 663, https://www.ams.org/notices/200806/tx080600663p.pdf .
  9. Engel, Peter (1981), "Über Wirkungsbereichsteilungen von kubischer Symmetrie", Zeitschrift für Kristallographie, Kristallgeometrie, Kristallphysik, Kristallchemie 154 (3–4): 199–215, doi:10.1524/zkri.1981.154.3-4.199, Bibcode1981ZK....154..199E .
  10. "69.14 Space Filling with Identical Symmetrical Solids", The Mathematical Gazette 69 (448): 117–120, 1985, doi:10.2307/3616930 .
  11. 11.0 11.1 Schmitt, Moritz (2016), On Space Groups and Dirichlet-Voronoi Stereohedra, https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/10176 .
  12. Erickson, Jeff (2003), "Arbitrarily large neighborly families of congruent symmetric convex 3-polytopes", Discrete geometry, Monogr. Textbooks Pure Appl. Math., 253, Dekker, New York, pp. 267–278, Bibcode2001math......6095E .

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