A Near-Miss to the Johnson Solids, Which I’m Naming the Ditrated Dodecahedron, Part One

I had a strange mishap recently with a member of my large collection of polyhedral dice. This hollow d12 fell apart, into two panels of six pentagons each.

I held them together at vertices, rotating one of the panels slightly.

Those gaps aren’t rhombi, because their four vertices are noncoplanar. Instead of rhombi, therefore, I’m filling the gaps with pairs of isosceles triangles. I’m going to request help from experts to find the edge length ratio for these isosceles triangles, but I know it isn’t 1:1, since all 92 of the Johnson solids have been found.

I think this particular near-miss may have been found and posted before in a Facebook group devoted to polyhedra, as a magnetic ball-and-stick model, but I don’t think it was named at that time. The name “ditrated dodecahedron” is derived from “tetrated dodecahedron,” which you can read about right here. The tetrated dodecahedron has four panels of pentagons rotated away from the center, while the ditrated dodecahedron has only two panels. The latter’s faces are twelve regular pentagons, and ten isosceles triangles.

I’m going to post this in that Facebook group where I think this near-miss to the Johnson solids may have been seen before, in an effort to spread the discovery-credit around anywhere it has been earned. I’d also like to have a Stella 4d model of this solid, and for that, again, I need the help of experts. Once I know more about this near-miss, I’ll post part two. [Update: part two is right here.]

Pluto and Charon, on the Faces of a Truncated Octahedron

The astronomical images here were taken by NASA’s New Horizons probe, while the geometry was done using Stella 4d: Polyhedron Navigator, a program you can try for free at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

Icosagonal Prism Variant

I made this using Stella 4d, which you can try for free right here: http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

A 62-Faced Faceting of the Icosidodecahedron

The faces of this polyhedron are twelve regular pentagons, thirty golden rectangles, and twenty equilateral triangles. I made it using Stella 4d, which you can try for free at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

Another Faceting of the Truncated Octahedron

This particular faceting is made of six square faces, and eight {6/2} hexagons.

Here it is again, in “rainbow color mode”:

I made these models using Stella 4d, which you can try for free at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

A Faceted Truncated Octahedron

I made this faceted truncated octahedron using Stella 4d, which you can try right here. It has twenty faces: six large squares, six small squares, and eight {6/2} hexagons.

A Compound of the Small and Great Stellated Dodecahedra

I made these compounds using Stella 4d, which you can try for free at http;//www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

A Truncation of the Small Stellated Dodecahedron

I made this with Stella 4d: Polyhedron Navigator, a program you can try for free at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

A Non-Convex Polyhedral Cluster Featuring Regular Heptagons, With a Puzzle

I stumbled upon this while playing with Stella 4d: Polyhedron Navigator, a program you can try for free at https://www.software3d.com/Stella.php. It’s difficult to herd regular heptagons.

There’s an obvious question raised by this image: what are the components of the polyhedral cluster, especially the one with heptagonal faces? Comments on this would be appreciated, especially ones with images of the components.

One Compound of Pyramids, and Another of Dipyramids

The compound above has eight components, each of which is a tall, triangular, and off-center pyramid. The one below has three co-centered components: elongated square dipyramids.

I made these using Stella 4d: Polyhedron Navigatgor, which you can try for free at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.