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Alternation

 
Wikipedia: Alternation (geometry)
Two snub cubes from great rhombicuboctahedron

See that red and green dots are placed at alternate vertices. A snub cube is generated from deleting either set of vertices, one resulting in clockwise gyrated squares, and other counterclockwise.

In geometry, an alternation (also called partial truncation) is an operation on a polyhedron or tiling that birectifies alternate vertices. Only even-sided polyhedra can be alternated, for example the zonohedra. Every 2n-sided face becomes n-sided. Square faces disappear into new edges.

An alternation of a regular polyhedron or tiling is sometimes labeled by the regular form, prefixed by an h, standing for half. For example h{4,3} is an alternated cube (creating a tetrahedron), and h{4,4} is an alternated square tiling (still a square tiling).

Contents

Snub

A snub is a related operation. It is an alternation applied to an omnitruncated regular polyhedron. An omnitruncated regular polyhedron or tiling always has even-sided faces and so can always be alternated.

For instance the snub cube is created in two steps. First it is omnitruncated, creating the great rhombicuboctahedron. Secondly that polyhedron is alternated into a snub cube. You can see from the picture on the right that there are two ways to alternate the vertices, and they are mirror images of each other, creating two chiral forms.

Another example is the uniform antiprisms. A uniform n-gonal antiprism can be constructed as an alternation of a 2n-gonal prism, and the snub of an n-edge hosohedron. In the case of prisms both alternated forms are identical.

Non-uniform zonohedra can also be alternated. For instance, the Rhombic triacontahedron can be snubbed into either an icosahedron or a dodecahedron depending on which vertices are removed.

Examples

Platonic solid generators

Three forms: regular → omnitruncated → snub.

The Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams are given as well. The omnitruncation actives all of the mirrors (ringed). The alternation is shown as rings with holes.

Symmetry
(p q 2)
Regular
CDW ring.pngCDW p.pngCDW dot.pngCDW q.pngCDW dot.png
Omnitruncated
CDW ring.pngCDW p.pngCDW ring.pngCDW q.pngCDW ring.png
Snub
CDW hole.pngCDW p.pngCDW hole.pngCDW q.pngCDW hole.png
Tetrahedral
(3 3 2)
Uniform polyhedron-33-t0.png
Tetrahedron
CDW ring.pngCDW 3.pngCDW dot.pngCDW 3.pngCDW dot.png
Uniform polyhedron-33-t012.png
truncated octahedron
CDW ring.pngCDW 3.pngCDW ring.pngCDW 3.pngCDW ring.png
Uniform polyhedron-33-s012.png
icosahedron
(snub tetrahedron)
CDW hole.pngCDW 3.pngCDW hole.pngCDW 3.pngCDW hole.png
Octahedral
(4 3 2)
Uniform polyhedron-43-t0.png
Cube
CDW ring.pngCDW 4.pngCDW dot.pngCDW 3.pngCDW dot.png
Uniform polyhedron-43-t012.png
Great rhombicuboctahedron
CDW ring.pngCDW 4.pngCDW ring.pngCDW 3.pngCDW ring.png
Uniform polyhedron-43-s012.png
snub cube
CDW hole.pngCDW 4.pngCDW hole.pngCDW 3.pngCDW hole.png
Icosahedral
(5 3 2)
Uniform polyhedron-53-t0.png
Dodecahedron
CDW ring.pngCDW 5.pngCDW dot.pngCDW 3.pngCDW dot.png
Uniform polyhedron-53-t012.png
Great rhombicosidodecahedron
CDW ring.pngCDW 5.pngCDW ring.pngCDW 3.pngCDW ring.png
Uniform polyhedron-53-s012.png
snub dodecahedron
CDW hole.pngCDW 5.pngCDW hole.pngCDW 3.pngCDW hole.png

Regular tiling generators

Symmetry
(p q 2)
Regular
CDW ring.pngCDW p.pngCDW dot.pngCDW q.pngCDW dot.png
Omnitruncated
CDW ring.pngCDW p.pngCDW ring.pngCDW q.pngCDW ring.png
Snub
CDW hole.pngCDW p.pngCDW hole.pngCDW q.pngCDW hole.png
Square
(4 4 2)
Uniform tiling 44-t0.png
(4.4.4.4)
CDW ring.pngCDW 4.pngCDW dot.pngCDW 4.pngCDW dot.png
Uniform tiling 44-t012.png
(4.8.8)
CDW ring.pngCDW 4.pngCDW ring.pngCDW 4.pngCDW ring.png
Uniform tiling 44-snub.png
(3.3.4.3.4)
CDW hole.pngCDW 4.pngCDW hole.pngCDW 4.pngCDW hole.png
Hexagonal
(6 3 2)
Tile 6,3.svg
(6.6.6)
CDW ring.pngCDW 6.pngCDW dot.pngCDW 3.pngCDW dot.png
Tile 46b.svg
(3.4.6.4)
CDW ring.pngCDW 6.pngCDW ring.pngCDW 3.pngCDW ring.png
Tile 33336.svg
3.3.3.3.6
CDW hole.pngCDW 6.pngCDW hole.pngCDW 3.pngCDW hole.png

Uniform prism generators (dihedral symmetry)

Alternate truncations can be applied to prisms. (A square antiprism may be called a snubbed 4-edge hosohedron, as well as an alternated octagonal prism.)

Two steps: 2n-gonal prismsn-gonal antiprism.

Alternate truncations

A similar operation can truncate alternate vertices, rather than just removing them. Below is a set of polyhedra that can be generated from the duals of Catalan solids. These have two types of vertices which can be alternately truncated. Truncating the "higher order" vertices produces these forms:

Name Original Truncation Truncated name
Cube
Dual of rectified tetrahedron
Hexahedron.jpg Alternate truncated cube.png Alternate truncated cube
Rhombic dodecahedron
Dual of cuboctahedron
Rhombicdodecahedron.jpg Truncated rhombic dodecahedron2.png Truncated rhombic dodecahedron
Rhombic triacontahedron
Dual of icosidodecahedron
Rhombictriacontahedron.svg Truncated rhombic triacontahedron.png Truncated rhombic triacontahedron
Triakis tetrahedron
Dual of truncated tetrahedron
Triakistetrahedron.jpg Truncated triakis tetrahedron.png Truncated triakis tetrahedron
Triakis octahedron
Dual of truncated cube
Triakisoctahedron.jpg Truncated triakis octahedron.png Truncated triakis octahedron
Triakis icosahedron
Dual of truncated dodecahedron
Triakisicosahedron.jpg Truncated triakis icosahedron.png Truncated triakis icosahedron

Higher dimensions

This alternation operation applies to higher dimensional polytopes and honeycombs as well, however in general most forms won't have uniform solution. The voids created by the deleted vertices will not in general create uniform facets.

Examples:

See also

References

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Alternation (geometry)" Read more