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The dodecahedron is a regular polyhedron with Schläfli symbol {5,3}, having 3 pentagons around each vertex. In geometry, the Schläfli symbol is a notation of the form {p,q,r,...} that defines regular polytopes and tessellations. The Schläfli symbol is named after the 19th-century mathematician Ludwig Schläfli who made important contributions in geometry and other areas.
[edit] DescriptionThe Schläfli symbol is a recursive description, starting with a p-sided regular polygon as {p}. For example, {3} is an equilateral triangle, {4} is a square and so on. A regular polyhedron which has q regular p-gon faces around each vertex is represented by {p,q}. For example, the cube has 3 squares around each vertex and is represented by {4,3}. A regular 4-polytope with r {p,q} regular polyhedral cells around each edge, and is represented by {p,q,r}, and so on. Regular polytopes can have star polygon elements, like the pentagram, with symbol {5/2}, represented by the vertices of a pentagon but connected alternately. A facet of a regular polytope {p,q,r,...,y,z} is {p,q,r,...,y}. There are z facets around each vertex. A regular polytope has a regular vertex figure. The vertex figure of a regular polytope {p,q,r,...} is {q,r,...}. The Schläfli symbol can represent a finite convex polyhedron, an infinite tessellation of Euclidean space, or an infinite tessellation of hyperbolic space, depending on the angle defect of the construction. A positive angle defect allows the vertex figure to fold into a higher dimension and loops back into itself as a polytope. A zero angle defect will tessellate space of the same dimension as the facets. A negative angle defect can't exist in ordinary space, but can be constructed in hyperbolic space. Usually a vertex figure is assumed to be a finite polytope, but can sometimes be considered a tessellation itself. A regular polytope also has a dual polytope, represented by the Schläfli symbol elements in reverse order. A self-dual regular polytope will have a symmetric Schläfli symbol. [edit] Symmetry groupsA Schläfli symbol is closely related to reflection symmetry groups, also called Coxeter groups, given with the same indices, but square brackets instead [p,q,r,...]. Such groups are often named by the regular polytopes they generate. For example [3,3] is the Coxeter group for Tetrahedral symmetry, and [3,4] is octahedral symmetry, and [3,5] is icosahedral symmetry. [edit] Regular polygons (plane)The Schläfli symbol of a regular polygon with n edges is {n}. For example, a regular pentagon is represented by {5}. See the convex regular polygon and nonconvex star polygon. For example, {5/2} is the pentagram. [edit] Regular polyhedra (3-space)The Schläfli symbol of a regular polyhedron is {p,q} if its faces are p-gons, and each vertex is surrounded by q faces (the vertex figure is a q-gon). For example {5,3} is the regular dodecahedron. It has pentagonal faces, and 3 pentagons around each vertex. See the 5 convex Platonic solids, the 4 nonconvex Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra. Schläfli symbols may also be defined for regular tessellations of Euclidean or hyperbolic space in a similar way. For example, the hexagonal tiling is represented by {6,3}. [edit] Regular polychora (4-space)The Schläfli symbol of a regular polychoron is of the form {p,q,r}. It has {p} regular polygonal faces, {p,q} cells, {q,r} regular polyhedral vertex figures, and {r} regular polygonal edge figures. See the six convex regular and 10 nonconvex polychora. For example, the 120-cell is represented by {5,3,3}. It is made of dodecahedron cells {5,3}, and has 3 cells around each edge. There is also one regular tessellation of Euclidean 3-space: the cubic honeycomb, with a Schläfli symbol of {4,3,4}, made of cubic cells, and 4 cubes around each edge. There are also 4 regular hyperbolic tessellations including {5,3,4}, the Hyperbolic small dodecahedral honeycomb, which fills space with dodecahedron cells. [edit] Higher dimensionsFor higher dimensional polytopes, the Schläfli symbol is defined recursively as {p1, p2, ..., pn − 1} if the facets have Schläfli symbol {p1,p2, ..., pn − 2} and the vertex figures have Schläfli symbol {p2,p3, ..., pn − 1}. Notice that a vertex figure of a facet of a polytope and a facet of a vertex figure of the same polytope are the same: {p2,p3, ..., pn − 2}. There are only 3 regular polytopes in 5 dimensions and above: the simplex, {3,3,3,...,3}; the cross-polytope, {3,3, ... ,3,4}; and the hypercube, {4,3,3,...,3}. There are no non-convex regular polytopes above 4 dimensions. [edit] Dual polytopesFor dimension 2 or higher, every polytope has a dual. If a polytope has Schläfli symbol {p1,p2, ..., pn − 1} then its dual has Schläfli symbol {pn − 1, ..., p2,p1}. If the sequence is the same forwards and backwards, the polytope is self-dual. Every regular polytope in 2 dimensions (polygon) is self-dual. [edit] Uniform prismatic polytopesPrismatic uniform polytopes can be defined and named as a Cartesian product of lower dimensional regular polytopes:
[edit] Extension to Schläfli symbolsCoxeter expanded his usage of the Schläfli symbol to quasiregular polyhedron by adding a vertical dimension to the symbol. It was a starting point towards the more general Coxeter-Dynkin diagram.
And for rectified 4-polytopes:
[edit] References
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