Metapentagon

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Metapentagon

Twelve Pink Floating Pentagons

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Twelve Pink Floating Pentagons

Because I can, that’s why.

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

A Survey of Right Angles in Convex Pentagons

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A Survey of Right Angles in Pentagons

A regular pentagon, of course, has no right angles, but irregular pentagons can have one, two, or three (but not four, nor five). There are two varieties for both two and three right angles in pentagons — the right angles can be consecutive, or non-consecutive.

A Radial Tessellation Featuring Regular Decagons, Regular Pentagons, and Golden Hexagons

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Radial Tessellation Featuring Decagons, Pentagon, and Golden Hexagons

As you can see, this can be continued indefinitely from the center.

Pentagonal Mosaic

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Pentagonal Mosaic

The 18-72-90 and 36-54-90 Triangles

It is well-known that an altitude splits an equilateral triangle into two 30-60-90 triangles, and that a diagonal splits a square into two 45-45-90 triangles. The properties of these “special right triangles,” as they are often called, are well-understood, and shall not be described here.

What happens if other polygons are split by diagonals, altitudes, or pieces thereof? Can more triangles be found which can allow, for example, exact determination of certain trigonometric ratios?

Yes, and the logical place to start looking is in the regular pentagon.

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In this diagram, the yellow triangle is the 18-72-90 triangle. Its hypotenuse is a diagonal of the pentagon, and its short leg is a half-side of the pentagon. Since sides and diagonals of regular pentagons are in the Golden Ratio, (1 + √5)/2, these two sides must be in twice that ratio. Let their lengths, then, be 1 (short leg) and 1 + √5 (hypotenuse), for those are simple, and in the specified ratio. The Pythagorean Theorem may then be applied to find the length of the long leg; the result is sqrt((2√5) + 5). Yes, nested radicals appear at this point, and they resist efforts to make them go away. No one promised this would be simple!

The blue triangle is the 36-54-90 triangle. Its long leg is a half-diagonal of the pentagon, while its hypotenuse is a full side of the pentagon. These triangle sides must, therefore, be in half the Golden Ratio, so the simplest lengths for those sides (which work) are 1 + √5 for the long leg, and 4 for the hypotenuse. Applying the Pythagorean Theorem to find the length of the short leg, nested radicals appear again in the solution:  sqrt(10 – 2√5).

Op Art Pentagrams

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Op Art Pentagrams

732 Interpenetrating Regular Pentagons in Orbit around a Common Axis

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732 Interpenetrating Regular Pentagons In Orbit Around a Common Axis

This was created by augmenting a great dodecahedron with more great dodecahedra, and then augmenting the result with even more of them.

The software I used was Stella 4d, which you can find right here.

Golden Rainbow Star

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Golden Rainbow Star

Mandala Featuring Many Pentagons

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mandala