3-3 duoprism
Template:Infobox 4-polytope In the geometry of 4 dimensions, the 3-3 duoprism or triangular duoprism is a four-dimensional convex polytope.
Descriptions
The duoprism is a 4-polytope that can be constructed using Cartesian product of two polygons.Template:R In the case of 3-3 duoprism is the simplest among them, and it can be constructed using Cartesian product of two triangles. The resulting duoprism has 9 vertices, 18 edges,Template:R and 15 faces—which include 9 squares and 6 triangles. Its cell has 6 triangular prism. It has Coxeter diagram Template:CDD, and symmetry Template:Brackets, order 72.
The hypervolume of a uniform 3-3 duoprism with edge length is This is the square of the area of an equilateral triangle,
The 3-3 duoprism can be represented as a graph with the same number of vertices and edges. Like the Berlekamp–van Lint–Seidel graph and the unknown solution to Conway's 99-graph problem, every edge is part of a unique triangle and every non-adjacent pair of vertices is the diagonal of a unique square. It is a toroidal graph, a locally linear graph, a strongly regular graph with parameters (9,4,1,2), the rook's graph, and the Paley graph of order 9.Template:R This graph is also the Cayley graph of the group with generating set .
The minimal distance graph of a 3-3 duoprism may be ascertained by the Cartesian product of graphs between two identical both complete graphs .Template:R
3-3 duopyramid

The dual polyhedron of a 3-3 duoprism is called a 3-3 duopyramid or triangular duopyramid.Template:R, page 45: "The dual of a p,q-duoprism is called a p,q-duopyramid."</ref> It has 9 tetragonal disphenoid cells, 18 triangular faces, 15 edges, and 6 vertices. It can be seen in orthogonal projection as a 6-gon circle of vertices, and edges connecting all pairs, just like a 5-simplex seen in projection.
The regular complex polygon 2{4}3, also 3{ }+3{ } has 6 vertices in with a real representation in matching the same vertex arrangement of the 3-3 duopyramid. It has 9 2-edges corresponding to the connecting edges of the 3-3 duopyramid, while the 6 edges connecting the two triangles are not included. It can be seen in a hexagonal projection with 3 sets of colored edges. This arrangement of vertices and edges makes a complete bipartite graph with each vertex from one triangle is connected to every vertex on the other. It is also called a Thomsen graph or 4-cage.Template:R
See also
- 3-4 duoprism
- Tesseract (4-4 duoprism)
- Duocylinder
References
- Coxeter, The Beauty of Geometry: Twelve Essays, Dover Publications, 1999, Template:ISBN (Chapter 5: Regular Skew Polyhedra in three and four dimensions and their topological analogues)
- Coxeter, H. S. M. Regular Skew Polyhedra in Three and Four Dimensions. Proc. London Math. Soc. 43, 33-62, 1937.
- John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, The Symmetries of Things 2008, Template:ISBN (Chapter 26)
- Norman Johnson Uniform Polytopes, Manuscript (1991)
- N.W. Johnson: The Theory of Uniform Polytopes and Honeycombs, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Toronto, 1966
- Template:PolyCell
External links
- The Fourth Dimension Simply Explained—describes duoprisms as "double prisms" and duocylinders as "double cylinders"
- Polygloss – glossary of higher-dimensional terms
- Exploring Hyperspace with the Geometric Product