A Compound of Two Pyritohedral Dodecahedra

compound of two pyritohedral dodecahedra

I made this compound using Stella 4d, a program which is available here: http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

The Compounds of Five Octahedra and Five Cubes, and Related Polyhedra

This is the compound of five octahedra, each a different color.

Cubes 5

Since the cube is dual to the octahedron, the compound of five cubes, below, is dual to the compound above.

cubes-5a

Here are five cubes and five octahedra, compounded together, and shown with the same five colors used above.

Cubes 5 and octahedra 5

This is the same compound, except with all squares/cubes having one color, and triangles/octahedra having another, made by changing the color-scheme used by Stella 4d (the program I use to make these images; it’s available here).

Cubes 5 and octahedra 5 colored by face-type

After seeing the two-color version of this ten-part compound, I decided to start stellating it, looking for stellations with an interesting appearance. Here is the 23rd stellation of the ten-part compound, colored by face-type.

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual 23rd stellation

Next, the 27th stellation, which is chiral, unlike the stellation showed above.

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual 27th stellation

The 33rd stellation also has an interesting appearance (using, I admit, completely subjective criteria for “interesting”), while still having easily-noticable differences to the stellations shown above.

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual 33rd stellation

At the 35th stellation, another interesting chiral polyhedron is found. Unexpectedly, its direction of “twist” appears opposite that seen in the 27th stellation. (It could well be that this “twist-reversal” is a common phenomenon in stellation-series — simply one I have never noticed before.)

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual 35th stellation

Next, the ten-part compound’s 39th stellation.

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual 39th stellation

After the 39th stellation, I entered a sort of “desert,” with many stellations in a row which did not strike me as interesting, often with only tiny differences between one and the next. The 194th stellation, though, I liked.

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual 194th stellation

Although I liked the 194th stellation, I didn’t want to risk trudging through another “desert” like the one which preceded it, so I jumped ahead to the final valid stellation, after which the series “wraps around” to its beginning.

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual final valid stellation

Next, I made another rotating image of this final valid stellation, this time with the color-scheme set to “rainbow color mode.”

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual final valid stellation rbc

I couldn’t resist taking this one stellation further, to see the beginning of the stellation-series, since I knew I might have entered it somewhere in the middle, rather than at the beginning.

Compound of 5 Cubes and dual final valid stellation next one rbc

What I found, I immediately recognized as the rhombic triacontahedron. In some ways, this was surprising, and in other ways, it was not. The compound of five cubes is, itself, a stellation of the rhombic triacontahedron — but what I started stellating also included the compound of five octahedra, which, so far as I know, is not part of the rhombic triacontahedron’s (very) long stellation-series. Also, I know what the rhombic triacontahedron’s final stellation looks like, and it isn’t the final stellation shown above, but is, instead, this:

final-stellation-of-the-rhombic-triaconta

To try to better-understand just what was going on here, I went back, and deliberately left out the five-cube part of the ten-part compound (which is a stellation of the rhombic triacontahedron), which left me just with the compound of five octahedra — and then I had Stella produce this compound’s final stellation.

Octahedra 5 final stellation

This was another polyhedron I recognized: the final stellation of the icosahedron. To verify that my memory was correct, I stellated it one more time. Sure enough, this is what I got:

Octahedra 5 final stellation one more

This reminded me that the compound of five octahedra is the second stellation of the icosahedron, helping to explain some of this. I also noticed that the five-octahedron compound can be seen as a faceting of the icosidodecahedron. (The icosidodecahedron is dual to the rhombic triacontahedron, and faceting is the reciprocal function of stellation.) However, I have no idea why the final stellation of the ten-part compound above appears as it does.

It is my opinion that a productive polyhedral investigation usually does more than answer questions; it also raises new ones. At least in my mind, that’s exactly what has happened. Therefore, I think this was a perfectly good way to begin the new year.

A Hollow, Five-Color Version of the Compound of Five Rhombic Dodecahedra

REC 5

I made this using Stella 4d, software you can find at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php. I also make a second version, with larger spheres and cylinders for the vertices and edges:

REC 5

A Compound of Ten Thin Parallelopipeds, Together with Its Final Stellation

Stellated Strombic Hexeconta rainbow

The polyhedron above also appeared in the post immediately before this one, as the second of three images. However, here it is presented in “rainbow color mode.”

This is its final stellation:

Stellated Strombic Hexeconta rainbow final valid stellation

Both virtual models were created with Stella 4d, software you may try for yourself at this website.

A Compound of Ten Elongated Octahedra Which Is Also a Particular Faceting of the Rhombicosidodecahedron, Together with Its Dual

Thinking about the post immediately before this one led me to see if I could connect opposite triangular faces of a rhombicosidodecahedron to form a ten-part compound — and it worked with Stella 4d just as it had when I “previewed” it in my head.

compound of ten elongated octahedra Faceted Rhombicosidodeca

The interesting dual of the above polyhedral compound, also a ten-part compound, I was not able to preview in my head (although that would be a nice ability to have), but creating it was easy with Stella:

compound of ten elongated octahedra Faceted Rhombicosidodeca dual

It is difficult, in the dual, to tell what the ten components are. To help with this, in the next image, all but one component has been removed. This reveals the components of the dual to be rhombus-faced parallelopipeds which are quite flattened, compared to most parallelopipeds I have seen before. This polyhedron is isomorphic to the cube, just as the elongated octahedra in the first compound were each isomorphic to the Platonic octahedron. Given that the cube and octahedron are duals, this is no surprise.

Stellated Strombic Hexeconta

Stella 4d may be tried for free, as a trial download, at this website: http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

A Compound of Fifteen Cuboids — Which Is Also a Particular Faceting of the Icosidodecahedron

The creator of Stella 4d, the program I used to make these rotating polyhedral images, is Robert Webb (and the software itself may be tried for free here). Recently, on Facebook, he displayed a paper model of this compound of fifteen cuboids, pointed out that it is a faceting of the icosidodecahedron, and I (being me) took that as a challenge to make it myself. Here is my first result, in which all fifteen cuboids have different colors.

Faceted Icosidodeca compound of 15 cuboids give RW credit.gif

I then realized that RW had rendered his in only five colors, so I studied his post more carefully, and made the appropriate adjustments to do the same:

Faceted Icosidodeca compound of 5 cuboids 5 color version

If you’d like to find the Stella page on Facebook, here is a link to it.

Some Enantiomorphic-Pair Compounds

In the last post here, three different color-versions of the same cluster-polyhedron were shown. Since this cluster-polyhedron is chiral, it is possible to make a compound of it, and its own enantiomer (or “mirror-image,” if you prefer). This first image shows that, with the face-color chosen by the number of sides of each face.

c5c augmented with snub cubes Compound of enantiomorphic pair

Shown next is the dual of this figure, also colored by the number of sides of each face.

c5c augmented with snub cubes Compound of enantiomorphic pair dual colored by number of sides of each face

Next, another image of the first compound shown here, but with the colors chosen by face-type (referring to each face’s position in the overall polyhedron).

c5c augmented with snub cubes Compound of enantiomorphic pair colored by face type

Finally, here is the dual, again, also with colors chosen by face-type.

c5c augmented with snub cubes Compound of enantiomorphic pair dual colored by face type

All four of these images were generated with Stella 4d, a computer program available at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

The Compound of Five Cubes, Augmented with Thirty Snub Cubes: Three Versions

Cubes 5 augmented by 30 snub cubes

This cluster-polyhedron was made with Stella 4d, software you can try at this website. Above, it is colored by face-type, referring to each face’s position within the overall cluster. In the image below, the original compound of five cubes contained one cube each, of five colors, and then each snub cube “inherited” its color from the cube to which it was attached.

Cubes 5

In the next version, the colors are chosen by the number of sides of each face.

Cubes 5

The Final Stellation of the Compound of Five Icosahedra

Stellated 5 Icosahedra final stellation

This was made using Stella 4d, software available at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

The Final Stellation of the Compound of Five Cubes

Stellated 5 Cubes final stellation colors derived from compound

The version of the final stellation of the compound of five cubes shown above has its colors derived from the traditional five-color version of the original compound, itself. The one below, by contrast, has its colors selected by face-type, without regard for the original compound.

Stellated 5 Cubes final stellation colored by face type

Both of these virtual models were created with Stella 4d: Polyhedron Navigator, software available at this website. Also, for more about this particular polyhedron, please see the next post.