Pentagonal icositetrahedron

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Short description: Catalan polyhedron
Pentagonal icositetrahedron
Pentagonal icositetrahedron, anticlockwise twistPentagonal icositetrahedron
(Click ccw or cw for rotating models.)
Type Catalan
Conway notation gC
Coxeter diagram
Face polygon
irregular pentagon
Faces 24
Edges 60
Vertices 38 = 6 + 8 + 24
Face configuration V3.3.3.3.4
Dihedral angle 136° 18' 33'
Symmetry group O, ½BC3, [4,3]+, 432
Dual polyhedron snub cube
Properties convex, face-transitive, chiral
Pentagonal icositetrahedron
Net
A geometric construction of the Tribonacci constant (AC), with compass and marked ruler, according to the method described by Xerardo Neira.

File:Pentagonal icositetrahedron.stl

In geometry, a pentagonal icositetrahedron or pentagonal icosikaitetrahedron[1] is a Catalan solid which is the dual of the snub cube. In crystallography it is also called a gyroid.[2][3]

It has two distinct forms, which are mirror images (or "enantiomorphs") of each other.

Construction

The pentagonal icositetrahedron can be constructed from a snub cube without taking the dual. Square pyramids are added to the six square faces of the snub cube, and triangular pyramids are added to the eight triangular faces that do not share an edge with a square. The pyramid heights are adjusted to make them coplanar with the other 24 triangular faces of the snub cube. The result is the pentagonal icositetrahedron.

Cartesian coordinates

Denote the tribonacci constant by t1.83928675521. (See snub cube for a geometric explanation of the tribonacci constant.) Then Cartesian coordinates for the 38 vertices of a pentagonal icositetrahedron centered at the origin, are as follows:

  • the 12 even permutations of (±1, ±(2t+1), ±t2) with an even number of minus signs
  • the 12 odd permutations of (±1, ±(2t+1), ±t2) with an odd number of minus signs
  • the 6 points (±t3, 0, 0), (0, ±t3, 0) and (0, 0, ±t3)
  • the 8 points (±t2, ±t2, ±t2)

The convex hulls for these vertices[4] scaled by t3 result in a unit circumradius octahedron centered at the origin, a unit cube centered at the origin scaled to R0.9416969935, and an irregular chiral snub cube scaled to R, as visualized in the figure below:

Combining an octahedron and snub cube to form the Pentagonal Icositetrahedron

Geometry

The pentagonal faces have four angles of arccos((1t)/2)114.81207447790 and one angle of arccos(2t)80.75170208839. The pentagon has three short edges of unit length each, and two long edges of length (t+1)/21.41964337760708. The acute angle is between the two long edges. The dihedral angle equals arccos(1/(t22))136.30923289232.

If its dual snub cube has unit edge length, its surface area and volume are:[5]

A=322(5t1)4t319.29994V=11(t4)2(20t37)7.4474

Orthogonal projections

The pentagonal icositetrahedron has three symmetry positions, two centered on vertices, and one on midedge.

Orthogonal projections
Projective
symmetry
[3] [4]+ [2]
Image
Dual
image

Variations

Isohedral variations with the same chiral octahedral symmetry can be constructed with pentagonal faces having 3 edge lengths.

This variation shown can be constructed by adding pyramids to 6 square faces and 8 triangular faces of a snub cube such that the new triangular faces with 3 coplanar triangles merged into identical pentagon faces.


Snub cube with augmented pyramids and merged faces

Pentagonal icositetrahedron

Net
Spherical pentagonal icositetrahedron

This polyhedron is topologically related as a part of sequence of polyhedra and tilings of pentagons with face configurations (V3.3.3.3.n). (The sequence progresses into tilings the hyperbolic plane to any n.) These face-transitive figures have (n32) rotational symmetry.

The pentagonal icositetrahedron is second in a series of dual snub polyhedra and tilings with face configuration V3.3.4.3.n.

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

References

  1. Conway, Symmetries of things, p.284
  2. "Promorphology of Crystals I". http://www.metafysica.nl/turing/promorph_crystals.html. 
  3. "Crystal Form, Zones, & Habit". http://www.tulane.edu/~sanelson/eens211/forms_zones_habit.htm. 
  4. Koca, Mehmet; Ozdes Koca, Nazife; Koc, Ramazon (2010). "Catalan Solids Derived From 3D-Root Systems and Quaternions". Journal of Mathematical Physics 51 (4). doi:10.1063/1.3356985. 
  5. Eric W. Weisstein, Pentagonal icositetrahedron (Catalan solid) at MathWorld.