Dodecahedron Made of Hexagons

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Dodecahedron Made of Hexagons

There’s no immediately obvious connection between hexagons and dodecahedra. I was therefore surprised when I ran into this while playing around with Stella 4d, a program which allows easy polyhedron manipulation. (See www.software3d.com/stella.php for free trial download.) Hexagons, it turns out, work perfectly well to trace out the edges of a dodecahedron, and they need not even be regular to do so.

A Second Version of My New Near-Miss to the Johnson Solids

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A Second Version of My New Near-Miss

A few days ago, I found a new near-miss to the 92 Johnson Solids. It appears on this blog, five posts ago, and looks a lot like what you see above — the differences are subtle, and will be explained below, after “near-miss” has been clarified.

A near-miss is a polyhedron which is almost a Johnson Solid. So what’s a Johnson Solid?

Well, consider all possible convex polyhedra which have only regular polygons as faces. Remove from this set the five Platonic Solids:

Next, remove the thirteen Archimedean Solids:

Now remove the infinite sets of prisms and antiprisms, the beginning of which are shown here:

What’s left? The answer to this question is known; it’s the set of Johnson Solids. It has been proven that there are exactly 92 of them:

When Norman Johnson systematically found all of these, and named them, in the late 1960s, he found a number of other polyhedra which were extremely close to being in this set. These are called the “near misses.” An example of a near-miss is the tetrated dodecahedron, which I co-discovered, and named, about a decade ago:

If you go to http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php, you can download a free trial version of software, Stella 4d, written by a friend of mine, Robert Webb (RW), which I used to generate this last image, as well as the rotating .gif which starts this post. (The still pictures were simply found using Google image-searches.) Stella 4d has a built-in library of near-misses, including the tetrated dodecahedron . . . but it doesn’t have all of them.

Well, why not? The reason is simple: the near-misses have no precise definition. They are simply “almost,” but not quite, Johnson Solids. In the case of the tetrated dodecahedron, what keeps it from being a Johnson Solid is the edges where yellow triangles meet other yellow triangles. These edges must be ~7% longer than the other edges, so the yellow triangles, unlike the other faces, are not quite regular — merely close.

There is no way to justify an arbitrary rule for just how close a near-miss must be to “Johnsonhood” be considered an “official” near-miss, so mathematicians have made no such rule. Research to find more near-misses is ongoing, and, due to the “fuzziness” of the definition, may never stop.

My informal test for a proposed near-miss is simple:  I show it to RW, and if he thinks it’s close enough to include in the near-miss library in Stella 4d, then it passes. This new one did, but not until RW found a way to improve it, using something I don’t really understand called a “spring model.” What you see at the top of this post is the result. Unlike in the previous version, the green decagons here are regular, but at the expense of regularity in the (former) blue squares, now near-squarish trapezoids, as well as the yellow hexagons. The pink hexagons are slightly irregular in both versions, and the red pentagons are regular in both.

I’m eagerly anticipating the release of the next version of Stella 4d, for this near-miss will be in it.  If I tell my students about this new discovery, they’ll want to know how much I got paid for it, which is, of course, nothing. I don’t know how to explain to them what it feels like to participate in the discovery of something — anything — which will survive me by a very long time. There’s nothing else quite like that feeling.

Now I just need to think of a good name for this thing!

[Update:   the new version of Stella is now out, and this polyhedron is now included in it. As it turns out, I no longer need to think of a name for this polyhedron, for RW took care of that for me, naming it the “zonish truncated icosahedron” in Stella‘s built-in library of polyhedra.]

Eleven and Twelve

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Eleven and Twelve

Software credit: see http://www.software3d.com/stella.php.

A New Near-Miss to the 92 Johnson Solids

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A New Near-Miss to the 92 Johnson Solids

This is a face-based zonish truncated icosahedron.

I’ve only been looking for a new near-miss for a decade!

Software credit: see www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

The Widened Edges of a Rhombic Dodecahedron

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The Widened Edges of a Rhombic Dodecahedron

Rendered with Stella 4d: you may try it for free at http://www.software3d.com/stella.php.

Zonish Icosidodecahedron

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Zonish Icosidodecahedron

To make this, I started with an icosidodecahedron, then added zonogons to the existing faces, in the ten zones along the three-fold symmetry axes.

Software used: Stella 4d. You may find it at www.software3d.com/stella.php.

A Twisted Version of the Snub Dodecahedron

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A Twisted Version of the Snub Dodecahedron

Some might say the snub dodecahedron was twisted enough already, but I wanted to crank it up a notch, so I made this . . . using Stella 4d: Polyhedron Navigator, a program found at http://www.software3d.com/Stella.php.

A New Look at the Great Stellated Dodecahedron

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A New Look at the Great Stellated Dodecahedron

In this virtual model, opposite planes have the same color. The beveling of the edges, this coloring method, plus the invisibility of certain parts, make the faces appear to be extensions of triangles, or triads of “v” shapes. Without this beveling effect on this coloring-method, however, it is easy to see that the true faces of this polyhedron are star pentagons. To see this second model enlarged — with this polyhedron’s traditional coloring — simply click on it.

Great Stellated Dodeca

The site to visit if you want to know how to make .gifs like these is http://www.software3d.com/stella.php.

The Offspring of the Rhombicosidodecahedron and the Truncated Icosahedron

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The Offspring of the Rhombicosidodecahedron and the Truncated Icosahedron

For more on the software used to make this, please see http://www.software3d.com/stella.php.

Base/Dual Compound: The Rhombcuboctahedron and the Strombic Icositetrahedron

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Base/Dual Compound:  The Rhombcuboctahedron and the Strombic Icositetrahedron

Alternate names for components of this compound are the rhombicuboctahedron and the kited icositetrahedron.

For more information on the software used to produce this image, please visit http://www.software3d.com/stella.php.