Cuboctahedron

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Short description: Polyhedron with 8 triangular faces and 6 square faces


Cuboctahedron
Cuboctahedron.jpg
(Click here for rotating model)
Type Archimedean solid
Uniform polyhedron
Elements F = 14, E = 24, V = 12 (χ = 2)
Faces by sides 8{3}+6{4}
Conway notation aC
aaT
Schläfli symbols r{4,3} or [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{Bmatrix} 4 \\ 3 \end{Bmatrix} }[/math]
rr{3,3} or [math]\displaystyle{ r\begin{Bmatrix} 3 \\ 3 \end{Bmatrix} }[/math]
t1{4,3} or t0,2{3,3}
Wythoff symbol 2 | 3 4
3 3 | 2
Coxeter diagram CDel node.pngCDel 4.pngCDel node 1.pngCDel 3.pngCDel node.png or CDel node 1.pngCDel split1-43.pngCDel nodes.png
CDel node 1.pngCDel 3.pngCDel node.pngCDel 3.pngCDel node 1.png or CDel node.pngCDel split1.pngCDel nodes 11.png
Symmetry group Oh, B3, [4,3], (*432), order 48
Td, [3,3], (*332), order 24
Rotation group O, [4,3]+, (432), order 24
Dihedral angle 125.26°
arcsec(−3)
References U07, C19, W11
Properties Semiregular convex quasiregular
Polyhedron 6-8 max.png
Colored faces
Polyhedron 6-8 vertfig.svg
3.4.3.4
(Vertex figure)
Polyhedron 6-8 dual max.png
Rhombic dodecahedron
(dual polyhedron)
Polyhedron 6-8 net.svg
Net

A cuboctahedron is a polyhedron with 8 triangular faces and 6 square faces. A cuboctahedron has 12 identical vertices, with 2 triangles and 2 squares meeting at each, and 24 identical edges, each separating a triangle from a square. As such, it is a quasiregular polyhedron, i.e. an Archimedean solid that is not only vertex-transitive but also edge-transitive.[1] It is radially equilateral.

Its dual polyhedron is the rhombic dodecahedron.

The cuboctahedron was probably known to Plato: Heron's Definitiones quotes Archimedes as saying that Plato knew of a solid made of 8 triangles and 6 squares.[2]

Synonyms

  • Vector Equilibrium (Buckminster Fuller) because its center-to-vertex radius equals its edge length (it has radial equilateral symmetry). Fuller also called a cuboctahedron built of rigid struts and flexible vertices a jitterbug; this object can be progressively transformed into an icosahedron, octahedron, and tetrahedron by folding along the diagonals of its square sides.[3]
  • With Oh symmetry, order 48, it is a rectified cube or rectified octahedron (Norman Johnson)
  • With Td symmetry, order 24, it is a cantellated tetrahedron or rhombitetratetrahedron.
  • With D3d symmetry, order 12, it is a triangular gyrobicupola.

Orthogonal projections

The cuboctahedron has four special orthogonal projections, centered on a vertex, an edge, and the two types of faces, triangular and square. The last two correspond to the B2 and A2 Coxeter planes. The skew projections show a square and hexagon passing through the center of the cuboctahedron.

Cuboctahedron (orthogonal projections)
Square
Face
Triangular
Face
Vertex Edge Skew
Polyhedron 6-8 from red max.png Polyhedron 6-8 from yellow max.png Polyhedron 6-8 from blue max.png
3-cube t1 B2.svg 3-cube t1.svg Cube t1 v.png Cube t1 e.png Cuboctahedron B2 planes.png Cuboctahedron 3 planes.png
[4] [6] [2] [2]
Rhombic dodecahedron (Dual polyhedron)
Dual cube t1 B2.png Dual cube t1.png Dual cube t1 v.png Dual cube t1 e.png Dual cube t1 skew1.png Dual cube t1 skew2.png

Spherical tiling

The spherical cuboctahedron is formed by four great circles.

The cuboctahedron can also be represented as a spherical tiling, and projected onto the plane via a stereographic projection. This projection is conformal, preserving angles but not areas or lengths. Straight lines on the sphere are projected as circular arcs on the plane.

Uniform tiling 432-t1.png Cuboctahedron stereographic projection square.png Cuboctahedron stereographic projection triangle.png Cuboctahedron stereographic projection vertex.png
orthographic projection square-centered triangle-centered Vertex centered
Stereographic projection

Structure

Coordinates

The Cartesian coordinates for the vertices of a cuboctahedron (of edge length 2) centered at the origin[4] are:

(±1,±1,0)
(±1,0,±1)
(0,±1,±1)

An alternate set of coordinates can be made in 4-space, as 12 permutations of:

(0,1,1,2)

This construction exists as one of 16 orthant facets of the cantellated 16-cell.

Root vectors

The cuboctahedron's 12 vertices can represent the root vectors of the simple Lie group A3. With the addition of 6 vertices of the octahedron, these vertices represent the 18 root vectors of the simple Lie group B3.

Metric properties

The area A and the volume V of the cuboctahedron of edge length a are:

[math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} A &= \left(6+2\sqrt{3}\right)a^2 &&\approx 9.464\,1016a^2 \\ V &= \tfrac{5}{3} \sqrt{2} a^3 &&\approx 2.357\,0226a^3. \end{align} }[/math]

Dissection

Tetrahedra and Octahedra

The cuboctahedron can be dissected into 6 square pyramids and 8 tetrahedra meeting at a central point. This dissection is expressed in the tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb where pairs of square pyramids are combined into octahedra.

TetraOctaHoneycomb-VertexConfig.svg

Irregular polyhedra

The cuboctahedron can be dissected into two triangular cupolas by a common hexagon passing through the center of the cuboctahedron.[lower-alpha 1] If these two triangular cupolas are twisted so triangles and squares line up, Johnson solid J27, the triangular orthobicupola, is created.

Cuboctahedron 3 planes.png120pxTriangular orthobicupola.png

Geometric relations

Progression between a tetrahedron, expanded into a cuboctahedron, and reverse expanded into the dual tetrahedron

Radial equilateral symmetry

In a cuboctahedron, the long radius (center to vertex) is the same as the edge length; thus its long diameter (vertex to opposite vertex) is 2 edge lengths. Its center is like the apical vertex of a pyramid: one edge length away from all the other vertices. (In the case of the cuboctahedron, the center is in fact the apex of 6 square and 8 triangular pyramids). This radial equilateral symmetry is a property of only a few uniform polytopes, including the two-dimensional hexagon, the three-dimensional cuboctahedron, and the four-dimensional 24-cell and 8-cell (tesseract). Radially equilateral polytopes are those which can be constructed, with their long radii, from equilateral triangles which meet at the center of the polytope, each contributing two radii and an edge. Therefore, all the interior elements which meet at the center of these polytopes have equilateral triangle inward faces, as in the dissection of the cuboctahedron into 6 square pyramids and 8 tetrahedra.

Each of these radially equilateral polytopes also occurs as cells of a characteristic space-filling tessellation: the tiling of regular hexagons, the rectified cubic honeycomb (of alternating cuboctahedra and octahedra), the 24-cell honeycomb and the tesseractic honeycomb, respectively. Each tessellation has a dual tessellation; the cell centers in a tessellation are cell vertices in its dual tessellation. The densest known regular sphere-packing in two, three and four dimensions uses the cell centers of one of these tessellations as sphere centers.

A cuboctahedron has octahedral symmetry. Its first stellation is the compound of a cube and its dual octahedron, with the vertices of the cuboctahedron located at the midpoints of the edges of either.

Constructions

A cuboctahedron can be obtained by taking an equatorial cross section of a four-dimensional 24-cell or 16-cell. A hexagon or a square can be obtained by taking an equatorial cross section of a cuboctahedron.

The cuboctahedron is a rectified cube and also a rectified octahedron.

It is also a cantellated tetrahedron. With this construction it is given the Wythoff symbol: 3 3 | 2. Cantellated tetrahedron.png

A skew cantellation of the tetrahedron produces a solid with faces parallel to those of the cuboctahedron, namely eight triangles of two sizes, and six rectangles. While its edges are unequal, this solid remains vertex-uniform: the solid has the full tetrahedral symmetry group and its vertices are equivalent under that group.

The edges of a cuboctahedron form four regular hexagons. If the cuboctahedron is cut in the plane of one of these hexagons, each half is a triangular cupola, one of the Johnson solids; the cuboctahedron itself thus can also be called a triangular gyrobicupola, the simplest of a series (other than the gyrobifastigium or "digonal gyrobicupola"). If the halves are put back together with a twist, so that triangles meet triangles and squares meet squares, the result is another Johnson solid, the triangular orthobicupola, also called an anticuboctahedron.

Both triangular bicupolae are important in sphere packing. The distance from the solid's center to its vertices is equal to its edge length. Each central sphere can have up to twelve neighbors, and in a face-centered cubic lattice these take the positions of a cuboctahedron's vertices. In a hexagonal close-packed lattice they correspond to the corners of the triangular orthobicupola. In both cases the central sphere takes the position of the solid's center.

Cuboctahedra appear as cells in three of the convex uniform honeycombs and in nine of the convex uniform 4-polytopes.

The volume of the cuboctahedron is 5/6 of that of the enclosing cube and 5/8 of that of the enclosing octahedron.

Vertex arrangement

Because it is radially equilateral, the cuboctahedron's center can be treated as a 13th canonical apical vertex, one edge length distant from the 12 ordinary vertices, as the apex of a canonical pyramid is one edge length equidistant from its other vertices.

The cuboctahedron shares its edges and vertex arrangement with two nonconvex uniform polyhedra: the cubohemioctahedron (having the square faces in common) and the octahemioctahedron (having the triangular faces in common), both have four hexagons. It also serves as a cantellated tetrahedron, as being a rectified tetratetrahedron.

Cuboctahedron.png
Cuboctahedron
Cuboctahedron equator.png
its equator
Cubohemioctahedron.png
Cubohemioctahedron
Octahemioctahedron.png
Octahemioctahedron

The cuboctahedron 2-covers the tetrahemihexahedron,[5] which accordingly has the same abstract vertex figure (two triangles and two squares: 3.4.3.4) and half the vertices, edges, and faces. (The actual vertex figure of the tetrahemihexahedron is 3.4.3/2.4, with the a/2 factor due to the cross.)

Cuboctahedron.png
Cuboctahedron
Tetrahemihexahedron.png
Tetrahemihexahedron

Kinematics

Main page: Kinematics of the cuboctahedron
Progressions between an octahedron, pseudoicosahedron, and cuboctahedron. The cuboctahedron can flex this way even if its edges (but not its faces) are rigid.

When interpreted as a framework of rigid flat faces, connected along the edges by hinges, the cuboctahedron is a rigid structure, as are all convex polyhedra, by Cauchy's theorem. However, when the faces are removed, leaving only rigid edges connected by flexible joints at the vertices, the result is not a rigid system (unlike polyhedra whose faces are all triangles, to which Cauchy's theorem applies despite the missing faces).

Adding a central vertex, connected by rigid edges to all the other vertices, subdivides the cuboctahedron into square pyramids and tetrahedra, meeting at the central vertex. Unlike the cuboctahedron itself, the resulting system of edges and joints is rigid, and forms part of the infinite octet truss structure.

Related polytopes

Regular polyhedra

The cuboctahedron is one of a family of uniform polyhedra related to the cube and regular octahedron.

The cuboctahedron also has tetrahedral symmetry with two colors of triangles.

Quasiregular polyhedra and tilings

The cuboctahedron exists in a sequence of symmetries of quasiregular polyhedra and tilings with vertex configurations (3.n)2, progressing from tilings of the sphere to the Euclidean plane and into the hyperbolic plane. With orbifold notation symmetry of *n32 all of these tilings are wythoff construction within a fundamental domain of symmetry, with generator points at the right angle corner of the domain.[6][7]


This polyhedron is topologically related as a part of sequence of cantellated polyhedra with vertex figure (3.4.n.4), and continues as tilings of the hyperbolic plane. These vertex-transitive figures have (*n32) reflectional symmetry.


4-dimensional polytopes

Orthogonal projections of 24-cell

The cuboctahedron can be decomposed into a regular octahedron and eight irregular but equal octahedra in the shape of the convex hull of a cube with two opposite vertices removed. This decomposition of the cuboctahedron corresponds with the cell-first parallel projection of the 24-cell into three dimensions. Under this projection, the cuboctahedron forms the projection envelope, which can be decomposed into six square faces, a regular octahedron, and eight irregular octahedra. These elements correspond with the images of six of the octahedral cells in the 24-cell, the nearest and farthest cells from the 4D viewpoint, and the remaining eight pairs of cells, respectively.

Cuboctahedral graph

Cuboctahedral graph
Cuboctahedral graph.png
4-fold symmetry
Vertices12
Edges24
Automorphisms48
Properties
Table of graphs and parameters

In the mathematical field of graph theory, a cuboctahedral graph is the graph of vertices and edges of the cuboctahedron, one of the Archimedean solids. It can also be constructed as the line graph of the cube. It has 12 vertices and 24 edges, is locally linear, and is a quartic Archimedean graph.[8]

orthogonal projection
3-cube t1.svg
6-fold symmetry

See also

Notes

  1. Notice that the cuboctahedron has four hexagonal central planes, inclined at 60° to each other. Like the hexagon, the cuboctahedron can be divided into equilateral triangles which meet at its center: it has radial equilateral symmetry.

References

  1. Coxeter 1973, pp. 18-19, §2.3 Quasi-regular polyhedra.
  2. Heath, Thomas L. (1931), "A manual of Greek mathematics", Nature (Clarendon) 128 (3235): 739–740, doi:10.1038/128739a0, Bibcode1931Natur.128..739T 
  3. "Vector Equilibrium: R. Buckminster Fuller". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sM44p385Ws. 
  4. Coxeter 1973, p. 52, §3.7 Coordinates for the vertices of the regular and quasi-regular solids.
  5. Richter, David A., Two Models of the Real Projective Plane, http://homepages.wmich.edu/~drichter/rptwo.htm, retrieved 2010-04-15 
  6. Coxeter 1973, pp. 86-88, §5.7 Wythoff's construction.
  7. Two Dimensional symmetry Mutations by Daniel Huson
  8. Read, R. C.; Wilson, R. J. (1998), An Atlas of Graphs, Oxford University Press, p. 269 

Bibliography

External links