Hosohedron

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox polyhedron

This beach ball would be a hosohedron with 6 spherical lune faces, if the 2 white caps on the ends were removed and the lunes extended to meet at the poles.

In spherical geometry, an [[Polygon|Template:Mvar-gonal]] hosohedron is a tessellation of lunes on a spherical surface, such that each lune shares the same two polar opposite vertices.

A regular Template:Mvar-gonal hosohedron has Schläfli symbol Template:Math with each spherical lune having internal angle Template:Mathradians (Template:Math degrees).[1][2]

Hosohedra as regular polyhedra

Template:See For a regular polyhedron whose Schläfli symbol is {mn}, the number of polygonal faces is :

N2=4n2m+2nmn.

The Platonic solids known to antiquity are the only integer solutions for m ≥ 3 and n ≥ 3. The restriction m ≥ 3 enforces that the polygonal faces must have at least three sides.

When considering polyhedra as a spherical tiling, this restriction may be relaxed, since digons (2-gons) can be represented as spherical lunes, having non-zero area.

Allowing m = 2 makes

N2=4n2×2+2n2n=n,

and admits a new infinite class of regular polyhedra, which are the hosohedra. On a spherical surface, the polyhedron {2, n} is represented as n abutting lunes, with interior angles of Template:Sfrac. All these spherical lunes share two common vertices.


A regular trigonal hosohedron, {2,3}, represented as a tessellation of 3 spherical lunes on a sphere.

A regular tetragonal hosohedron, {2,4}, represented as a tessellation of 4 spherical lunes on a sphere.

Template:Regular hosohedral tilings

Kaleidoscopic symmetry

The 2n digonal spherical lune faces of a 2n-hosohedron, {2,2n}, represent the fundamental domains of dihedral symmetry in three dimensions: the cyclic symmetry Cnv, [n], (*nn), order 2n. The reflection domains can be shown by alternately colored lunes as mirror images.

Bisecting each lune into two spherical triangles creates an n-gonal bipyramid, which represents the dihedral symmetry Dnh, order 4n.

Different representations of the kaleidoscopic symmetry of certain small hosohedra
Symmetry (order 2n) Schönflies notation Cnv C1v C2v C3v C4v C5v C6v
Orbifold notation (*nn) (*11) (*22) (*33) (*44) (*55) (*66)
Coxeter diagram Template:CDD Template:CDD Template:CDD Template:CDD Template:CDD Template:CDD Template:CDD
[n] [] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
2n-gonal hosohedron Schläfli symbol {2,2n} {2,2} {2,4} {2,6} {2,8} {2,10} {2,12}
Alternately colored fundamental domains

Relationship with the Steinmetz solid

The tetragonal hosohedron is topologically equivalent to the bicylinder Steinmetz solid, the intersection of two cylinders at right-angles.[3]

Derivative polyhedra

The dual of the n-gonal hosohedron {2, n} is the n-gonal dihedron, {n, 2}. The polyhedron {2,2} is self-dual, and is both a hosohedron and a dihedron.

A hosohedron may be modified in the same manner as the other polyhedra to produce a truncated variation. The truncated n-gonal hosohedron is the n-gonal prism.

Apeirogonal hosohedron

In the limit, the hosohedron becomes an apeirogonal hosohedron as a 2-dimensional tessellation:

Hosotopes

Template:See Multidimensional analogues in general are called hosotopes. A regular hosotope with Schläfli symbol {2,p,...,q} has two vertices, each with a vertex figure {p,...,q}.

The two-dimensional hosotope, {2}, is a digon.

Etymology

The term “hosohedron” appears to derive from the Greek ὅσος (hosos) “as many”, the idea being that a hosohedron can have “as many faces as desired”.[4] It was introduced by Vito Caravelli in the eighteenth century.[5]

See also

Template:Commonscat

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Polyhedron navigator Template:Polyhedra Template:Tessellation

  1. Coxeter, Regular polytopes, p. 12
  2. Abstract Regular polytopes, p. 161
  3. Template:Mathworld
  4. Template:Cite book
  5. Template:Cite book