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词条 Goldberg polyhedron
释义

  1. Elements

  2. Construction

  3. Examples

  4. See also

  5. Notes

  6. References

  7. External links

Icosahedral Goldberg polyhedra with pentagons in red

GP(1,4) = {5+,3}1,4

GP(4,4) = {5+,3}4,4

GP(7,0) = {5+,3}7,0

GP(3,5) = {5+,3}3,5

GP(10,0) = {5+,3}10,0
Equilateral and spherical

In mathematics, and more specifically in polyhedral combinatorics, a Goldberg polyhedron is a convex polyhedron made from hexagons and pentagons. They were first described by Michael Goldberg (1902–1990) in 1937. They are defined by three properties: each face is either a pentagon or hexagon, exactly three faces meet at each vertex, and they have rotational icosahedral symmetry. They are not necessarily mirror-symmetric; e.g. GP(5,3) and GP(3,5) are enantiomorphs of each other. A consequence of Euler's polyhedron formula is that there will be exactly twelve pentagons.

Icosahedral symmetry ensures that the pentagons are always regular, although many of the hexagons may not be. Typically all of the vertices lie on a sphere, but they can also be computed as equilateral.

It is a dual polyhedron of a geodesic sphere, with all triangle faces and 6 triangles per vertex, except for 12 vertices with 5 triangles.

Simple examples of Goldberg polyhedra include the dodecahedron and truncated icosahedron. Other forms can be described by taking a chess knight move from one pentagon to the next: first take m steps in one direction, then turn 60° to the left and take n steps. Such a polyhedron is denoted GP(m,n). A dodecahedron is GP(1,0) and a truncated icosahedron is GP(1,1).

A similar technique can be applied to construct polyhedra with tetrahedral symmetry and octahedral symmetry. These polyhedra will have triangles or squares rather than pentagons. These variations are given Roman numeral subscripts denoting the number of sides on the non-hexagon faces: GPIII(n,m), GPIV(n,m), and GPV(n,m).

Elements

The number of vertices, edges, and faces of GP(m,n) can be computed from m and n, with T = m2 + mn + n2 = (m + n)2 − mn, depending on one of three symmetry systems:[1]

Symmetry Icosahedral (Goldberg) Octahedral Tetrahedral
Base Dodecahedron
GPV(1,0) = {5+,3}1,0
Cube
GPIV(1,0) = {4+,3}1,0
Tetrahedron
GPIII(1,0) = {3+,3}1,0
Image
SymbolGPV(m,n) = {5+,3}m,nGPIV(m,n) = {4+,3}m,nGPIII(m,n) = {3+,3}m,n
Vertices
Edges
Faces
Faces by type12 {5} and 10(T − 1) {6}6 {4} and 4(T − 1) {6}4 {3} and 2(T − 1) {6}

Construction

Most Goldberg polyhedra can be constructed using Conway polyhedron notation starting with (T)etrahedron, (C)ube, and (D)odecahedron seeds. The chamfer operator, c, replaces all edges by hexagons, transforming GP(m,n) to GP(2m,2n), with a T multiplier of 4. The truncated kis operator, y = tk, generates GP(3,0), transforming GP(m,n) to GP(3m,3n), with a T multiplier of 9.

For class 2 forms, the dual kis operator, z = dk, transforms GP(a,0) into GP(a,a), with a T multiplier of 3. For class 3 forms, the whirl operator, w, generates GP(2,1), with a T multiplier of 7. A clockwise and counterclockwise whirl generator, w{{overline|w}} = wrw generates GP(7,0) in class 1. In general, a whirl can transform a GP(a,b) into GP(a + 3b,2ab) for a > b and the same chiral direction. If chiral directions are reversed, GP(a,b) becomes GP(2a + 3b,a − 2b) if a ≥ 2b, and GP(3a + b,2b − a) if a < 2b.

Examples

Class I polyhedra
Frequency (1,0)(2,0)(3,0)(4,0)(5,0)(6,0)(7,0)(8,0)(m,0)
T 1 4 9 1625364964m2
Icosahedral (Goldberg)more
Octahedralmore
Tetrahedralmore
Class II polyhedra
Frequency (1,1)(2,2)(3,3)(4,4)(5,5)(6,6)(7,7)(8,8)(m,m)
T 3 12 27 48751081471923m2
Icosahedral (Goldberg)more
Octahedralmore
Tetrahedralmore
Class III polyhedra
Frequency (1,2)(1,3)(2,3)(1,4)(2,4)(3,4)(1,5)(m,n)
T 7 13 1921283731m2+mn+n2
Icosahedral (Goldberg)more
Octahedralmore
Tetrahedralmore

See also

  • Capsid
  • Geodesic sphere
  • Fullerene#Other buckyballs
  • Conway polyhedron notation
  • Goldberg–Coxeter construction

Notes

1. ^Clinton’s Equal Central Angle Conjecture, JOSEPH D. CLINTON

References

  • {{cite journal | title=A class of multi-symmetric polyhedra | first=Michael | last=Goldberg | journal= Tohoku Mathematical Journal | year=1937 |url=https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/tmj1911/43/0/43_0_104/_article}}
  • Joseph D. Clinton, Clinton’s Equal Central Angle Conjecture
  • {{cite book|first=George |last=Hart | authorlink = George W. Hart | chapter=Goldberg Polyhedra | title=Shaping Space | edition= 2nd | editor-first=Marjorie | editor-last=Senechal | editor-link = Marjorie Senechal | pages=125–138 | publisher=Springer | year=2012 | doi=10.1007/978-0-387-92714-5_9 }} [https://books.google.com/books?id=kZtCAAAAQBAJ&lpg=PP1&pg=PA127]
  • {{cite web | title=Mathematical Impressions: Goldberg Polyhedra | first=George | last=Hart | authorlink = George W. Hart | date=June 18, 2013 | url=https://www.simonsfoundation.org/multimedia/mathematical-impressions-goldberg-polyhedra/ | publisher= Simons Science News }}
  • Fourth class of convex equilateral polyhedron with polyhedral symmetry related to fullerenes and viruses, Stan Schein and James Maurice Gaye, PNAS, Early Edition doi: 10.1073/pnas.1310939111

External links

  • Dual Geodesic Icosahedra
  • [https://www.sciencenews.org/article/goldberg-variations-new-shapes-molecular-cages Goldberg variations: New shapes for molecular cages] Flat hexagons and pentagons come together in new twist on old polyhedral, by Dana Mackenzie, February 14, 2014

1 : Goldberg polyhedra

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