(mathematics) A plane figure formed by joining a finite number of equilateral triangles along their sides.
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(mathematics) A plane figure formed by joining a finite number of equilateral triangles along their sides.
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A polyiamond (also polyamond or simply iamond) is a polyform in which the base form is an equilateral triangle. The word polyiamond is a back-formation from diamond, because this word is often used to describe the shape of a pair of equilateral triangles placed base to base, and the initial "di-" looked like a Greek prefix meaning "two-".
The basic combinatorial question is how many different polyiamonds with a given number of triangles exist. If mirror images are considered identical, the number of possible n-iamonds for n = 1, 2, 3, … is (sequence A000577 in OEIS):
As with polyominoes, fixed polyiamonds (where different orientations count as distinct) and one-sided polyiamonds (where mirror images count as distinct but rotations count as identical) may also be defined. The number of free polyiamonds with holes is given by A070764; the number of free polyiamonds without holes is given by A070765; the number of fixed polyiamonds is given by A001420; the number of one-sided polyiamonds is given by A006534.
| Name | Number of Forms | Forms |
|---|---|---|
| Moniamond | 1 | |
| Diamond | 1 | |
| Triamond | 1 | |
| Tetriamond | 3 | |
| Pentiamond | 4 | |
| Hexiamond | 12 |
Possible symmetries are mirror symmetry, 2-, 3-, and 6-fold rotational symmetry, and each combined with mirror symmetry.
2-fold rotational symmetry with and without mirror symmetry requires at least 2 and 4 triangles, respectively. 6-fold rotational symmetry with and without mirror symmetry requires at least 6 and 18 triangles, respectively. Asymmetry requires at least 5 triangles. 3-fold rotational symmetry without mirror symmetry requires at least 7 triangles.
In the case of only mirror symmetry we can distinguish having the symmetry axis aligned with the grid or rotated 30° (requires at least 4 and 3 triangles, respectively); ditto for 3-fold rotational symmetry, combined with mirror symmetry (requires at least 18 and 1 triangles, respectively).
| Asymmetric | Mirror, 0° | Mirror, 30° | Rotational, 2-Fold | Mirror, 2-Fold |
| Rotational, 3-Fold | Mirror, 0°, 3-fold | Mirror, 30°, 3-fold | Rotational, 6-Fold | Mirror, 6-Fold |
Like polyominoes, but unlike polyhexes, polyiamonds have three-dimensional counterparts, formed by aggregating tetrahedra. However, polytetrahedra do not tile 3-space in the way polyiamonds can tile 2-space.
Any polyiamond of order 6 or less can be used to tile the plane. All but one of the heptiamonds can be used to tile the plane.[1]
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