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In geometry, the 600-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol {3,3,5}. It is also known as the C600, hexacosichoron[1] and hexacosihedroid.[2] It is also called a tetraplex (abbreviated from "tetrahedral complex") and a polytetrahedron, being bounded by tetrahedral cells.
600-cell | |
---|---|
Type | Convex regular 4-polytope |
Schläfli symbol | {3,3,5} |
Coxeter diagram | |
Cells | 600 ({3,3}) |
Faces | 1200 {3} |
Edges | 720 |
Vertices | 120 |
Vertex figure | icosahedron |
Petrie polygon | 30-gon |
Coxeter group | H4, [3,3,5], order 14400 |
Dual | 120-cell |
Properties | convex, isogonal, isotoxal, isohedral |
Uniform index | 35 |
The 600-cell's boundary is composed of 600 tetrahedral cells with 20 meeting at each vertex. Together they form 1200 triangular faces, 720 edges, and 120 vertices. It is the 4-dimensional analogue of the icosahedron, since it has five tetrahedra meeting at every edge, just as the icosahedron has five triangles meeting at every vertex. Its dual polytope is the 120-cell.
Geometry
editThe 600-cell is the fifth in the sequence of 6 convex regular 4-polytopes (in order of complexity and size at the same radius).[a] It can be deconstructed into twenty-five overlapping instances of its immediate predecessor the 24-cell,[5] as the 24-cell can be deconstructed into three overlapping instances of its predecessor the tesseract (8-cell), and the 8-cell can be deconstructed into two instances of its predecessor the 16-cell.[6]
The reverse procedure to construct each of these from an instance of its predecessor preserves the radius of the predecessor, but generally produces a successor with a smaller edge length. The 24-cell's edge length equals its radius, but the 600-cell's edge length is ~0.618 times its radius,[7] which is the golden ratio.
Regular convex 4-polytopes | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Symmetry group | A4 | B4 | F4 | H4 | |||
Name | 5-cell Hyper-tetrahedron |
16-cell Hyper-octahedron |
8-cell Hyper-cube |
24-cell
|
600-cell Hyper-icosahedron |
120-cell Hyper-dodecahedron | |
Schläfli symbol | {3, 3, 3} | {3, 3, 4} | {4, 3, 3} | {3, 4, 3} | {3, 3, 5} | {5, 3, 3} | |
Coxeter mirrors | |||||||
Mirror dihedrals | 𝝅/3 𝝅/3 𝝅/3 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 | 𝝅/3 𝝅/3 𝝅/4 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 | 𝝅/4 𝝅/3 𝝅/3 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 | 𝝅/3 𝝅/4 𝝅/3 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 | 𝝅/3 𝝅/3 𝝅/5 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 | 𝝅/5 𝝅/3 𝝅/3 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 𝝅/2 | |
Graph | |||||||
Vertices | 5 tetrahedral | 8 octahedral | 16 tetrahedral | 24 cubical | 120 icosahedral | 600 tetrahedral | |
Edges | 10 triangular | 24 square | 32 triangular | 96 triangular | 720 pentagonal | 1200 triangular | |
Faces | 10 triangles | 32 triangles | 24 squares | 96 triangles | 1200 triangles | 720 pentagons | |
Cells | 5 tetrahedra | 16 tetrahedra | 8 cubes | 24 octahedra | 600 tetrahedra | 120 dodecahedra | |
Tori | 1 5-tetrahedron | 2 8-tetrahedron | 2 4-cube | 4 6-octahedron | 20 30-tetrahedron | 12 10-dodecahedron | |
Inscribed | 120 in 120-cell | 675 in 120-cell | 2 16-cells | 3 8-cells | 25 24-cells | 10 600-cells | |
Great polygons | 2 squares x 3 | 4 rectangles x 4 | 4 hexagons x 4 | 12 decagons x 6 | 100 irregular hexagons x 4 | ||
Petrie polygons | 1 pentagon x 2 | 1 octagon x 3 | 2 octagons x 4 | 2 dodecagons x 4 | 4 30-gons x 6 | 20 30-gons x 4 | |
Long radius | |||||||
Edge length | |||||||
Short radius | |||||||
Area | |||||||
Volume | |||||||
4-Content |
Coordinates
editUnit radius Cartesian coordinates
editThe vertices of a 600-cell of unit radius centered at the origin of 4-space, with edges of length 1/φ ≈ 0.618 (where φ = 1 + √5/2 ≈ 1.618 is the golden ratio), can be given[8] as follows:
8 vertices obtained from
- (0, 0, 0, ±1)
by permuting coordinates, and 16 vertices of the form:
- (±1/2, ±1/2, ±1/2, ±1/2)
The remaining 96 vertices are obtained by taking even permutations of
- (±φ/2, ±1/2, ±φ−1/2, 0)
Note that the first 8 are the vertices of a 16-cell, the second 16 are the vertices of a tesseract, and those 24 vertices together are the vertices of a 24-cell. The remaining 96 vertices are the vertices of a snub 24-cell, which can be found by partitioning each of the 96 edges of another 24-cell (dual to the first) in the golden ratio in a consistent manner.[9]
When interpreted as quaternions,[b] these are the unit icosians.
In the 24-cell, there are squares, hexagons and triangles that lie on great circles (in central planes through four or six vertices).[c] In the 600-cell there are twenty-five overlapping inscribed 24-cells, with each vertex and square shared by five 24-cells, and each hexagon or triangle shared by two 24-cells.[e] In each 24-cell there are three disjoint 16-cells, so in the 600-cell there are 75 overlapping inscribed 16-cells.[f] Each 16-cell constitutes a distinct orthonormal basis for the choice of a coordinate reference frame.
The 60 axes and 75 16-cells of the 600-cell constitute a geometric configuration, which in the language of configurations is written as 605754 to indicate that each axis belongs to 5 16-cells, and each 16-cell contains 4 axes.[10] Each axis is orthogonal to exactly 15 others, and these are just its companions in the 5 16-cells in which it occurs.
Hopf spherical coordinates
editIn the 600-cell there are also great circle pentagons and decagons (in central planes through ten vertices).[11]
Only the decagon edges are visible elements of the 600-cell (because they are the edges of the 600-cell). The edges of the other great circle polygons are interior chords of the 600-cell, which are not shown in any of the 600-cell renderings in this article (except where shown as dashed lines).[k]
By symmetry, an equal number of polygons of each kind pass through each vertex; so it is possible to account for all 120 vertices as the intersection of a set of central polygons of only one kind: decagons, hexagons, pentagons, squares, or triangles. For example, the 120 vertices can be seen as the vertices of 15 pairs of completely orthogonal squares which do not share any vertices, or as 100 dual pairs of non-orthogonal hexagons between which all axis pairs are orthogonal, or as 144 non-orthogonal pentagons six of which intersect at each vertex. This latter pentagonal symmetry of the 600-cell is captured by the set of Hopf coordinates[13] (𝜉i, 𝜂, 𝜉j)[n] given as:
- ({<10}𝜋/5, {≤5}𝜋/10, {<10}𝜋/5)
where {<10} is the permutation of the ten digits (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9) and {≤5} is the permutation of the six digits (0 1 2 3 4 5). The 𝜉i and 𝜉j coordinates range over the 10 vertices of great circle decagons; even and odd digits label the vertices of the two great circle pentagons inscribed in each decagon.[o]
Structure
editPolyhedral sections
editThe mutual distances of the vertices, measured in degrees of arc on the circumscribed hypersphere, only have the values 36° = 𝜋/5, 60° = 𝜋/3, 72° = 2𝜋/5, 90° = 𝜋/2, 108° = 3𝜋/5, 120° = 2𝜋/3, 144° = 4𝜋/5, and 180° = 𝜋. Departing from an arbitrary vertex V one has at 36° and 144° the 12 vertices of an icosahedron,[p] at 60° and 120° the 20 vertices of a dodecahedron, at 72° and 108° the 12 vertices of a larger icosahedron, at 90° the 30 vertices of an icosidodecahedron, and finally at 180° the antipodal vertex of V.[14][15][16] These can be seen in the H3 Coxeter plane projections with overlapping vertices colored.[17]
These polyhedral sections are solids in the sense that they are 3-dimensional, but of course all of their vertices lie on the surface of the 600-cell (they are hollow, not solid). Each polyhedron lies in Euclidean 4-dimensional space as a parallel cross section through the 600-cell (a hyperplane). In the curved 3-dimensional space of the 600-cell's boundary surface envelope, the polyhedron surrounds the vertex V the way it surrounds its own center. But its own center is in the interior of the 600-cell, not on its surface. V is not actually at the center of the polyhedron, because it is displaced outward from that hyperplane in the fourth dimension, to the surface of the 600-cell. Thus V is the apex of a 4-pyramid based on the polyhedron.
Golden chords
editThe 120 vertices are distributed[18] at eight different chord lengths from each other. These edges and chords of the 600-cell are simply the edges and chords of its five great circle polygons.[19] In ascending order of length, they are √0.𝚫, √1, √1.𝚫, √2, √2.𝚽, √3, √3.𝚽, and √4.[s]
Notice that the four hypercubic chords of the 24-cell (√1, √2, √3, √4)[c] alternate with the four new chords of the 600-cell's additional great circles, the decagons and pentagons. The new golden chord lengths are necessarily square roots of fractions, but very special fractions related to the golden ratio[q] including the two golden sections of √5, as shown in the diagram.[r]
Boundary envelopes
editThe 600-cell rounds out the 24-cell by adding 96 more vertices between the 24-cell's existing 24 vertices,[u] in effect adding twenty-four more overlapping 24-cells inscribed in the 600-cell.[f] The new surface thus formed is a tessellation of smaller, more numerous cells[v] and faces: tetrahedra of edge length 1/φ ≈ 0.618 instead of octahedra of edge length 1. It encloses the √1 edges of the 24-cells, which become invisible interior chords in the 600-cell, like the √2 and √3 chords.
Since the tetrahedra are made of shorter triangle edges than the octahedra (by a factor of 1/φ, the inverse golden ratio), the 600-cell does not have unit edge-length in a unit-radius coordinate system the way the 24-cell and the tesseract do; unlike those two, the 600-cell is not radially equilateral. Like them it is radially triangular in a special way,[z] but one in which golden triangles rather than equilateral triangles meet at the center.[aa] Only a few uniform polytopes have this property, including the four-dimensional 600-cell, the three-dimensional icosidodecahedron, and the two-dimensional decagon. (The icosidodecahedron is the equatorial cross section of the 600-cell, and the decagon is the equatorial cross section of the icosidodecahedron.) Radially golden polytopes are those which can be constructed, with their radii, from golden triangles.
The boundary envelope of 600 small tetrahedral cells wraps around the twenty-five envelopes of 24 octahedral cells (adding some 4-dimensional space in places between these curved 3-dimensional envelopes). The shape of those interstices must be an octahedral 4-pyramid of some kind, but in the 600-cell it is not regular.[ab]
Geodesics
editThe vertex chords of the 600-cell are arranged in geodesic great circle polygons of five kinds: decagons, hexagons, pentagons, squares, and triangles.[22]
The √0.𝚫 = 𝚽 edges form 72 flat regular central decagons, 6 of which cross at each vertex.[p] Just as the icosidodecahedron can be partitioned into 6 central decagons (60 edges = 6 × 10), the 600-cell can be partitioned into 72 decagons (720 edges = 72 × 10). The 720 √0.𝚫 edges divide the surface into 1200 triangular faces and 600 tetrahedral cells: a 600-cell. The 720 edges occur in 360 parallel pairs, √3.𝚽 apart. As in the decagon and the icosidodecahedron, the edges occur in golden triangles which meet at the center of the polytope. The 72 great decagons can be divided into 6 sets of 12 non-intersecting Clifford parallel geodesics,[af] such that only one decagonal great circle in each set passes through each vertex, and the 12 decagons in each set reach all 120 vertices.[24]
The √1 chords form 200 central hexagons (25 sets of 16, with each hexagon in two sets),[d] 10 of which cross at each vertex[ag] (4 from each of five 24-cells that meet at the vertex, with each hexagon in two of those 24-cells).[i] Each set of 16 hexagons consists of the 96 edges and 24 vertices of one of the 25 overlapping inscribed 24-cells. The √1 chords join vertices which are two √0.𝚫 edges apart. Each √1 chord is the long diameter of a face-bonded pair of tetrahedral cells (a triangular bipyramid), and passes through the center of the shared face. As there are 1200 faces, there are 1200 √1 chords, in 600 parallel pairs, √3 apart. The hexagonal planes are non-orthogonal (60 degrees apart) but they occur as 100 dual pairs in which all 3 axes of one hexagon are orthogonal to all 3 axes of its dual.[25] The 200 great hexagons can be divided into 10 sets of 20 non-intersecting Clifford parallel geodesics, such that only one hexagonal great circle in each set passes through each vertex, and the 20 hexagons in each set reach all 120 vertices.[26]
The √1.𝚫 chords form 144 central pentagons, 6 of which cross at each vertex.[k] The √1.𝚫 chords run vertex-to-every-second-vertex in the same planes as the 72 decagons: two pentagons are inscribed in each decagon. The √1.𝚫 chords join vertices which are two √0.𝚫 edges apart on a geodesic great circle. The 720 √1.𝚫 chords occur in 360 parallel pairs, √2.𝚽 = φ apart.
The √2 chords form 450 central squares, 15 of which cross at each vertex (3 from each of the five 24-cells that meet at the vertex). The √2 chords join vertices which are three √0.𝚫 edges apart (and two √1 chords apart). There are 600 √2 chords, in 300 parallel pairs, √2 apart. The 450 great squares (225 completely orthogonal pairs) can be divided into 15 sets of 30 non-intersecting Clifford parallel geodesics, such that only one square great circle in each set passes through each vertex, and the 30 squares (15 completely orthogonal pairs) in each set reach all 120 vertices.[27]
The √2.𝚽 = φ chords form the legs of 720 central isosceles triangles (72 sets of 10 inscribed in each decagon), 6 of which cross at each vertex. The third edge (base) of each isosceles triangle is of length √3.𝚽. The √2.𝚽 chords run vertex-to-every-third-vertex in the same planes as the 72 decagons, joining vertices which are three √0.𝚫 edges apart on a geodesic great circle. There are 720 distinct √2.𝚽 chords, in 360 parallel pairs, √1.𝚫 apart.
The √3 chords form 400 equilateral central triangles (25 sets of 32, with each triangle in two sets), 10 of which cross at each vertex (4 from each of five 24-cells, with each triangle in two of the 24-cells). Each set of 32 triangles consists of the 96 √3 chords and 24 vertices of one of the 25 overlapping inscribed 24-cells. The √3 chords run vertex-to-every-second-vertex in the same planes as the 200 hexagons: two triangles are inscribed in each hexagon. The √3 chords join vertices which are four √0.𝚫 edges apart (and two √1 chords apart on a geodesic great circle). Each √3 chord is the long diameter of two cubic cells in the same 24-cell.[ah] There are 1200 √3 chords, in 600 parallel pairs, √1 apart.
The √3.𝚽 chords (the diagonals of the pentagons) form the legs of 720 central isosceles triangles (144 sets of 5 inscribed in each pentagon), 6 of which cross at each vertex. The third edge (base) of each isosceles triangle is an edge of the pentagon of length √1.𝚫, so these are golden triangles. The √3.𝚽 chords run vertex-to-every-fourth-vertex in the same planes as the 72 decagons, joining vertices which are four √0.𝚫 edges apart on a geodesic great circle. There are 720 distinct √3.𝚽 chords, in 360 parallel pairs, √0.𝚫 apart.
The √4 chords occur as 60 long diameters (75 sets of 4 orthogonal axes with each set comprising a 16-cell), the 120 long radii of the 600-cell. The √4 chords join opposite vertices which are five √0.𝚫 edges apart on a geodesic great circle. There are 25 distinct but overlapping sets of 12 diameters, each comprising one of the 25 inscribed 24-cells.[j] There are 75 distinct but overlapping sets of 4 orthogonal diameters, each comprising one of the 75 inscribed 16-cells.
The sum of the squared lengths[ai] of all these distinct chords of the 600-cell is 14,400 = 1202.[aj] These are all the central polygons through vertices, but the 600-cell does have one noteworthy great circle that does not pass through any vertices (a 0-gon).[an] Moreover, in 4-space there are geodesics on the 3-sphere which do not lie in central planes at all. There are geodesic shortest paths between two 600-cell vertices that are helical rather than simply circular; they correspond to isoclinic (diagonal) rotations rather than simple rotations.[ao]
All the geodesic polygons enumerated above lie in central planes of just three kinds, each characterized by a rotation angle: decagon planes (𝜋/5 apart), hexagon planes (𝜋/3 apart, also in the 25 inscribed 24-cells), and square planes (𝜋/2 apart, also in the 75 inscribed 16-cells and the 24-cells). These central planes of the 600-cell can be divided into 4 orthogonal central hyperplanes (3-spaces) each forming an icosidodecahedron. There are 450 great squares 90 degrees apart; 200 great hexagons 60 degrees apart; and 72 great decagons 36 degrees apart.[at] Each great square plane is completely orthogonal to another great square plane. Each great hexagon plane is completely orthogonal to a plane which intersects only two vertices (one √4 long diameter): a great digon plane.[au] Each great decagon plane is completely orthogonal to a plane which intersects no vertices: a great 0-gon plane.[al]
Fibrations of great circle polygons
editEach set of similar great circle polygons (squares or hexagons or decagons) can be divided into bundles of non-intersecting Clifford parallel great circles (of 30 squares or 20 hexagons or 12 decagons).[af] Each fiber bundle of Clifford parallel great circles[ap] is a discrete Hopf fibration which fills the 600-cell, visiting all 120 vertices just once.[32] Each discrete Hopf fibration has its 3-dimensional base which is a distinct polyhedron that acts as a map or scale model of the fibration.[av] The great circle polygons in each bundle spiral around each other, delineating helical rings of face-bonded cells which nest into each other, pass through each other without intersecting in any cells and exactly fill the 600-cell with their disjoint cell sets. The different fiber bundles with their cell rings each fill the same space (the 600-cell) but their fibers run Clifford parallel in different "directions"; great circle polygons in different fibrations are not Clifford parallel.[33]
Decagons
editThe fibrations of the 600-cell include 6 fibrations of its 72 great decagons: 6 fiber bundles of 12 great decagons.[ae] The 12 Clifford parallel decagons in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel decagons are spanned by edges of other great decagons.
Each fiber bundle[aq] delineates 20 helical rings of 30 tetrahedral cells each,[ad] with five rings nesting together around each decagon.[34] The Hopf map of this fibration is the icosahedron, where each of 12 vertices lifts to a great decagon, and each of 20 triangular faces lifts to a 30-cell ring.[av] Each tetrahedral cell occupies only one of the 20 cell rings in each of the 6 fibrations. The tetrahedral cell contributes each of its 6 edges to a decagon in a different fibration, but contributes that edge to five distinct cell rings in the fibration.[ac]
The 12 great circles and 30-cell rings of the 600-cell's 6 characteristic Hopf fibrations make the 600-cell a geometric configuration of 30 "points" and 12 "lines" written as 302125. It is called the Schläfli double six configuration after Ludwig Schläfli,[36] the Swiss mathematician who discovered the 600-cell and the complete set of regular polytopes in n dimensions.[37]
Hexagons
editThe fibrations of the 24-cell include 4 fibrations of its 16 great hexagons: 4 fiber bundles of 4 great hexagons. The 4 Clifford parallel hexagons in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel hexagons are spanned by edges of other great hexagons. Each fiber bundle delineates 4 helical rings of 6 octahedral cells each, with three rings nesting together around each hexagon. Each octahedral cell occupies only one cell ring in each of the 4 fibrations. The octahedral cell contributes 3 of its 12 edges to 3 different Clifford parallel hexagons in each fibration, but contributes each edge to three distinct cell rings in the fibration.
The 600-cell contains 25 24-cells, and can be seen (10 different ways) as a compound of 5 disjoint 24-cells.[k] It has 10 fibrations of its 200 great hexagons: 10 fiber bundles of 20 great hexagons. The 20 Clifford parallel hexagons in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel hexagons are spanned by edges of great decagons.[ar] Each fiber bundle delineates 20 helical rings of 6 octahedral cells each, with three rings nesting together around each hexagon. The Hopf map of this fibration is the dodecahedron, where the 20 vertices each lift to a bundle of great hexagons.[26] Each octahedral cell occupies only one of the 20 6-octahedron rings in each of the 10 fibrations. The 20 6-octahedron rings belong to 5 disjoint 24-cells of 4 6-octahedron rings each; each hexagonal fibration of the 600-cell consists of 5 disjoint 24-cells.
Squares
editThe fibrations of the 16-cell include 3 fibrations of its 6 great squares: 3 fiber bundles of 2 great squares. The 2 Clifford parallel squares in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel squares are spanned by edges of other great squares. Each fiber bundle delineates 2 helical rings of 8 tetrahedral cells each. Each tetrahedral cell occupies only one cell ring in each of the 3 fibrations. The tetrahedral cell contributes each of its 6 edges to a different square (contributing two opposite non-intersecting edges to each of the 3 fibrations), but contributes each edge to both of the two distinct cell rings in the fibration.
The 600-cell contains 75 16-cells, and can be seen (10 different ways) as a compound of 15 disjoint 16-cells. It has 15 fibrations of its 450 great squares: 15 fiber bundles of 30 great squares. The 30 Clifford parallel squares in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel squares are spanned by edges of great decagons.[as] Each fiber bundle delineates 30 cell-disjoint helical rings of 8 tetrahedral cells each.[ax] The Hopf map of this fibration is the icosidodecahedron, where the 30 vertices each lift to a bundle of great squares.[27] Each tetrahedral cell occupies only one of the 30 8-tetrahedron rings in each of the 15 fibrations.
Clifford parallel cell rings
editThe densely packed helical cell rings[38][39][32] of fibrations are cell-disjoint, but they share vertices, edges and faces. Each fibration of the 600-cell can be seen as a dense packing of cell rings with the corresponding faces of adjacent cell rings face-bonded to each other.[ba] The same fibration can also be seen as a minimal sparse arrangement of fewer completely disjoint cell rings that do not touch at all.[g]
The fibrations of great decagons can be seen (five different ways) as 4 completely disjoint 30-cell rings with spaces separating them, rather than as 20 face-bonded cell rings, by leaving out all but one cell ring of the five that meet at each decagon.[40] The five different ways you can do this are equivalent, in that all five correspond to the same discrete fibration (in the same sense that the 6 decagonal fibrations are equivalent, in that all 6 cover the same 600-cell). The 4 cell rings still constitute the complete fibration: they include all 12 Clifford parallel decagons, which visit all 120 vertices.[bb] This subset of 4 of 20 cell rings is dimensionally analogous[bc] to the subset of 12 of 72 decagons, in that both are sets of completely disjoint Clifford parallel polytopes which visit all 120 vertices.[bd] The subset of 4 of 20 cell rings is one of 5 fibrations within the fibration of 12 of 72 decagons: a fibration of a fibration. All the fibrations have this two level structure with subfibrations.
The fibrations of the 24-cell's great hexagons can be seen (three different ways) as 2 completely disjoint 6-cell rings with spaces separating them, rather than as 4 face-bonded cell rings, by leaving out all but one cell ring of the three that meet at each hexagon. Therefore each of the 10 fibrations of the 600-cell's great hexagons can be seen as 2 completely disjoint octahedral cell rings.
The fibrations of the 16-cell's great squares can be seen (two different ways) as a single 8-tetrahedral-cell ring with an adjacent cell-ring-sized empty space, rather than as 2 face-bonded cell rings, by leaving out one of the two cell rings that meet at each square. Therefore each of the 15 fibrations of the 600-cell's great squares can be seen as a single tetrahedral cell ring.[ax]
The sparse constructions of the 600-cell's fibrations correspond to lower-symmetry decompositions of the 600-cell, 24-cell or 16-cell with cells of different colors to distinguish the cell rings from the spaces between them.[be] The particular lower-symmetry form of the 600-cell corresponding to the sparse construction of the great decagon fibrations is dimensionally analogous[bc] to the snub tetrahedron form of the icosahedron (which is the base[av] of these fibrations on the 2-sphere). Each of the 20 Boerdijk-Coxeter cell rings[ad] is lifted from a corresponding face of the icosahedron.[bh]
Constructions
editThe 600-cell incorporates the geometries of every convex regular polytope in the first four dimensions, except the 5-cell, the 120-cell, and the polygons {7} and above.[44] Consequently, there are numerous ways to construct or deconstruct the 600-cell, but none of them are trivial. The construction of the 600-cell from its regular predecessor the 24-cell can be difficult to visualize.
Gosset's construction
editThorold Gosset discovered the semiregular 4-polytopes, including the snub 24-cell with 96 vertices, which falls between the 24-cell and the 600-cell in the sequence of convex 4-polytopes of increasing size and complexity in the same radius. Gosset's construction of the 600-cell from the 24-cell is in two steps, using the snub 24-cell as an intermediate form. In the first, more complex step (described elsewhere) the snub 24-cell is constructed by a special snub truncation of a 24-cell at the golden sections of its edges.[9] In the second step the 600-cell is constructed in a straightforward manner by adding 4-pyramids (vertices) to facets of the snub 24-cell.[45]
The snub 24-cell is a diminished 600-cell from which 24 vertices (and the cluster of 20 tetrahedral cells around each) have been truncated,[u] leaving a "flat" icosahedral cell in place of each removed icosahedral pyramid.[p] The snub 24-cell thus has 24 icosahedral cells and the remaining 120 tetrahedral cells. The second step of Gosset's construction of the 600-cell is simply the reverse of this diminishing: an icosahedral pyramid of 20 tetrahedral cells is placed on each icosahedral cell.
Constructing the unit-radius 600-cell from its precursor the unit-radius 24-cell by Gosset's method actually requires three steps. The 24-cell precursor to the snub-24 cell is not of the same radius: it is larger, since the snub-24 cell is its truncation. Starting with the unit-radius 24-cell, the first step is to reciprocate it around its midsphere to construct its outer canonical dual: a larger 24-cell, since the 24-cell is self-dual. That larger 24-cell can then be snub truncated into a unit-radius snub 24-cell.
Cell clusters
editSince it is so indirect, Gosset's construction may not help us very much to directly visualize how the 600 tetrahedral cells fit together into a curved 3-dimensional surface envelope,[v] or how they lie on the underlying surface envelope of the 24-cell's octahedral cells. For that it is helpful to build up the 600-cell directly from clusters of tetrahedral cells.
Most of us have difficulty visualizing the 600-cell from the outside in 4-space, or recognizing an outside view of the 600-cell due to our total lack of sensory experience in 4-dimensional spaces,[46] but we should be able to visualize the surface envelope of 600 cells from the inside because that volume is a 3-dimensional space that we could actually "walk around in" and explore.[47] In these exercises of building the 600-cell up from cell clusters, we are entirely within a 3-dimensional space, albeit a strangely small, closed curved space, in which we can go a mere ten edge lengths away in a straight line in any direction and return to our starting point.
Icosahedra
editThe vertex figure of the 600-cell is the icosahedron.[p] Twenty tetrahedral cells meet at each vertex, forming an icosahedral pyramid whose apex is the vertex, surrounded by its base icosahedron. The 600-cell has a dihedral angle of 𝜋/3 + arccos(−1/4) ≈ 164.4775°.[49]
An entire 600-cell can be assembled from 24 such icosahedral pyramids (bonded face-to-face at 8 of the 20 faces of the icosahedron, colored yellow in the illustration), plus 24 clusters of 5 tetrahedral cells (four cells face-bonded around one) which fill the voids remaining between the icosahedra. Each icosahedron is face-bonded to each adjacent cluster of 5 cells by two blue faces that share an edge (which is also one of the six edges of the central tetrahedron of the five). Six clusters of 5 cells surround each icosahedron, and six icosahedra surround each cluster of 5 cells. Five tetrahedral cells surround each icosahedron edge: two from inside the icosahedral pyramid, and three from outside it.[bl]
The apexes of the 24 icosahedral pyramids are the vertices of a 24-cell inscribed in the 600-cell. The other 96 vertices (the vertices of the icosahedra) are the vertices of an inscribed snub 24-cell, which has exactly the same structure of icosahedra and tetrahedra described here, except that the icosahedra are not 4-pyramids filled by tetrahedral cells; they are only "flat" 3-dimensional icosahedral cells, because the central apical vertex is missing.
The 24-cell edges joining icosahedral pyramid apex vertices run through the centers of the yellow faces. Coloring the icosahedra with 8 yellow and 12 blue faces can be done in 5 distinct ways.[bm] Thus each icosahedral pyramid's apex vertex is a vertex of 5 distinct 24-cells,[i] and the 120 vertices comprise 25 (not 5) 24-cells.[f]
The icosahedra are face-bonded into geodesic "straight lines" by their opposite yellow faces, bent in the fourth dimension into a ring of 6 icosahedral pyramids. Their apexes are the vertices of a great circle hexagon. This hexagonal geodesic traverses a ring of 12 tetrahedral cells, alternately bonded face-to-face and vertex-to-vertex. The long diameter of each face-bonded pair of tetrahedra (each triangular bipyramid) is a hexagon edge (a 24-cell edge). There are 4 rings of 6 icosahedral pyramids intersecting at each apex-vertex, just as there are 4 cell-disjoint interlocking rings of 6 octahedra in the 24-cell (a hexagonal fibration).[bq]
The tetrahedral cells are face-bonded into triple helices, bent in the fourth dimension into rings of 30 tetrahedral cells.[ad] The three helices are geodesic "straight lines" of 10 edges: great circle decagons which run Clifford parallel[af] to each other. Each tetrahedron, having six edges, participates in six different decagons[ac] and thereby in all 6 of the decagonal fibrations of the 600-cell.
The partitioning of the 600-cell into clusters of 20 cells and clusters of 5 cells is artificial, since all the cells are the same. One can begin by picking out an icosahedral pyramid cluster centered at any arbitrarily chosen vertex, so there are 120 overlapping icosahedra in the 600-cell.[bj] Their 120 apexes are each a vertex of five 24-vertex 24-cells, so there are 5*120/24 = 25 overlapping 24-cells.[k]
Octahedra
editThere is another useful way to partition the 600-cell surface, into 24 clusters of 25 tetrahedral cells, which reveals more structure[55] and a direct construction of the 600-cell from its predecessor the 24-cell.
Begin with any one of the clusters of 5 cells (above), and consider its central cell to be the center object of a new larger cluster of tetrahedral cells. The central cell is the first section of the 600-cell beginning with a cell. By surrounding it with more tetrahedral cells, we can reach the deeper sections beginning with a cell.
First, note that a cluster of 5 cells consists of 4 overlapping pairs of face-bonded tetrahedra (triangular dipyramids) whose long diameter is a 24-cell edge (a hexagon edge) of length √1. Six more triangular dipyramids fit into the concavities on the surface of the cluster of 5,[br] so the exterior chords connecting its 4 apical vertices are also 24-cell edges of length √1. They form a tetrahedron of edge length √1, which is the second section of the 600-cell beginning with a cell.[bs] There are 600 of these √1 tetrahedral sections in the 600-cell.
With the six triangular dipyamids fit into the concavities, there are 12 new cells and 6 new vertices in addition to the 5 cells and 8 vertices of the original cluster. The 6 new vertices form the third section of the 600-cell beginning with a cell, an octahedron of edge length √1, obviously the cell of a 24-cell.[bt] As partially filled so far (by 17 tetrahedral cells), this √1 octahedron has concave faces into which a short triangular pyramid fits; it has the same volume as a regular tetrahedral cell but an irregular tetrahedral shape.[bu] Each octahedron surrounds 1 + 4 + 12 + 8 = 25 tetrahedral cells: 17 regular tetrahedral cells plus 8 volumetrically equivalent tetrahedral cells each consisting of 6 one-sixth fragments from 6 different regular tetrahedral cells that each span three adjacent octahedral cells.[bv]
Thus the unit-radius 600-cell may be constructed directly from its predecessor,[ab] the unit-radius 24-cell, by placing on each of its octahedral facets a truncated[bw] irregular octahedral pyramid of 14 vertices[bx] constructed (in the above manner) from 25 regular tetrahedral cells of edge length 1/φ ≈ 0.618.
Union of two tori
editThere is yet another useful way to partition the 600-cell surface into clusters of tetrahedral cells, which reveals more structure[56] and the decagonal fibrations of the 600-cell. An entire 600-cell can be assembled around two rings of 5 icosahedral pyramids, bonded vertex-to-vertex into two geodesic "straight lines".
The 120-cell can be decomposed into two disjoint tori. Since it is the dual of the 600-cell, this same dual tori structure exists in the 600-cell, although it is somewhat more complex. The 10-cell geodesic path in the 120-cell corresponds to the 10-vertex decagon path in the 600-cell.[57]
Start by assembling five tetrahedra around a common edge. This structure looks somewhat like an angular "flying saucer". Stack ten of these, vertex to vertex, "pancake" style. Fill in the annular ring between each pair of "flying saucers" with 10 tetrahedra to form an icosahedron. You can view this as five vertex-stacked icosahedral pyramids, with the five extra annular ring gaps also filled in.[bz] The surface is the same as that of ten stacked pentagonal antiprisms: a triangular-faced column with a pentagonal cross-section.[58] Bent into a columnar ring this is a torus consisting of 150 cells, ten edges long, with 100 exposed triangular faces,[ca] 150 exposed edges, and 50 exposed vertices. Stack another tetrahedron on each exposed face. This will give you a somewhat bumpy torus of 250 cells with 50 raised vertices, 50 valley vertices, and 100 valley edges.[cb] The valleys are 10 edge long closed paths and correspond to other instances of the 10-vertex decagon path mentioned above (great circle decagons). These decagons spiral around the center core decagon,[cc] but mathematically they are all equivalent (they all lie in central planes).
Build a second identical torus of 250 cells that interlinks with the first. This accounts for 500 cells. These two tori mate together with the valley vertices touching the raised vertices, leaving 100 tetrahedral voids that are filled with the remaining 100 tetrahedra that mate at the valley edges. This latter set of 100 tetrahedra are on the exact boundary of the duocylinder and form a Clifford torus.[cd] They can be "unrolled" into a square 10×10 array. Incidentally this structure forms one tetrahedral layer in the tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb. There are exactly 50 "egg crate" recesses and peaks on both sides that mate with the 250 cell tori.[by] In this case into each recess, instead of an octahedron as in the honeycomb, fits a triangular bipyramid composed of two tetrahedra.
This decomposition of the 600-cell has symmetry [[10,2+,10]], order 400, the same symmetry as the grand antiprism.[59] The grand antiprism is just the 600-cell with the two above 150-cell tori removed, leaving only the single middle layer of 300 tetrahedra, dimensionally analogous[bc] to the 10-face belt of an icosahedron with the 5 top and 5 bottom faces removed (a pentagonal antiprism).[ce]
The two 150-cell tori each contain 6 Clifford parallel great decagons (five around one), and the two tori are Clifford parallel to each other, so together they constitute a complete fibration of 12 decagons that reaches all 120 vertices, despite filling only half the 600-cell with cells.
Boerdijk–Coxeter helix rings
editThe 600-cell can also be partitioned into 20 cell-disjoint intertwining rings of 30 cells,[34] each ten edges long, forming a discrete Hopf fibration which fills the entire 600-cell.[60][61] Each ring of 30 face-bonded tetrahedra is a cylindrical Boerdijk–Coxeter helix bent into a ring in the fourth dimension.
A single 30-tetrahedron Boerdijk–Coxeter helix ring within the 600-cell, seen in stereographic projection.[ad] |
A 30-tetrahedron ring can be seen along the perimeter of this 30-gonal orthogonal projection of the 600-cell.[an] |
The 30-cell ring as a {30/11} polygram of 30 edges wound into a helix that twists around its axis 11 times. This projection along the axis of the 30-cell cylinder shows the 30 vertices 12° apart around the cylinder's circular cross section, with the edges connecting every 11th vertex on the circle.[am] |
The 30-vertex, 30-tetrahedron Boerdijk–Coxeter helix ring, cut and laid out flat in 3-dimensional space. Three cyan Clifford parallel great decagons bound the ring.[ae] They are bridged by a skew 30-gram helix of 30 magenta edges linking all 30 vertices: the Petrie polygon of the 600-cell.[cf] The 15 orange edges and 15 yellow edges form separate 15-gram helices, the edge-paths of isoclines. |
The 30-cell ring is the 3-dimensional space occupied by the 30 vertices of three cyan Clifford parallel great decagons that lie adjacent to each other, 36° = 𝜋/5 = one 600-cell edge length apart at all their vertex pairs.[cg] The 30 magenta edges joining these vertex pairs form a helical triacontagram, a skew 30-gram spiral of 30 edge-bonded triangular faces, that is the Petrie polygon of the 600-cell.[cf] The dual of the 30-cell ring (the skew 30-gon made by connecting its cell centers) is the Petrie polygon of the 120-cell, the 600-cell's dual polytope.[aw] The central axis of the 30-cell ring is a great 30-gon geodesic that passes through the center of 30 faces, but does not intersect any vertices.[an]
The 15 orange edges and 15 yellow edges form separate 15-gram helices. Each orange or yellow edge crosses between two cyan great decagons. Successive orange or yellow edges of these 15-gram helices do not lie on the same great circle; they lie in different central planes inclined at 36° = 𝝅/5 to each other.[at] Each 15-gram helix is noteworthy as the edge-path of an isocline, the geodesic path of an isoclinic rotation.[ao] The isocline is a circular curve which intersects every second vertex of the 15-gram, missing the vertex in between. A single isocline runs twice around each orange (or yellow) 15-gram through every other vertex, hitting half the vertices on the first loop and the other half of them on the second loop. The two connected loops forms a single Möbius loop, a skew {15/2} pentadecagram. The pentadecagram is not shown in these illustrations (but see below), because its edges are invisible chords between vertices which are two orange (or two yellow) edges apart, and no chords are shown in these illustrations. Although the 30 vertices of the 30-cell ring do not lie in one great 30-gon central plane,[cg] these invisible pentadecagram isoclines are true geodesic circles of a special kind, that wind through all four dimensions rather than lying in a 2-dimensional plane as an ordinary geodesic great circle does.[ch]
Five of these 30-cell helices nest together and spiral around each of the 10-vertex decagon paths, forming the 150-cell torus described in the grand antiprism decomposition above.[59] Thus every great decagon is the center core decagon of a 150-cell torus.[ci] The 600-cell may be decomposed into 20 30-cell rings, or into two 150-cell tori and 10 30-cell rings, but not into four 150-cell tori of this kind.[cj] The 600-cell can be decomposed into four 150-cell tori of a different kind.[40]
Radial golden triangles
editThe 600-cell can be constructed radially from 720 golden triangles of edge lengths √0.𝚫 √1 √1 which meet at the center of the 4-polytope, each contributing two √1 radii and a √0.𝚫 edge. They form 1200 triangular pyramids with their apexes at the center: irregular tetrahedra with equilateral √0.𝚫 bases (the faces of the 600-cell). These form 600 tetrahedral pyramids with their apexes at the center: irregular 5-cells with regular √0.𝚫 tetrahedron bases (the cells of the 600-cell).
Characteristic orthoscheme
editCharacteristics of the 600-cell[63] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
edge[64] | arc | dihedral[65] | |||
𝒍 | 36° | 164°29′ | |||
𝟀 | 22°15′20″ | 60° | |||
𝝉[ck] | 18° | 36° | |||
𝟁 | 17°44′40″ | 60° | |||
22°15′20″ | 90° | ||||
18° | 90° | ||||
17°44′40″ | 90° | ||||
37°44′40″ |
Every regular 4-polytope has its characteristic 4-orthoscheme, an irregular 5-cell.[x] The characteristic 5-cell of the regular 600-cell is represented by the Coxeter-Dynkin diagram , which can be read as a list of the dihedral angles between its mirror facets. It is an irregular tetrahedral pyramid based on the characteristic tetrahedron of the regular tetrahedron. The regular 600-cell is subdivided by its symmetry hyperplanes into 14400 instances of its characteristic 5-cell that all meet at its center.[ay]
The characteristic 5-cell (4-orthoscheme) has four more edges than its base characteristic tetrahedron (3-orthoscheme), joining the four vertices of the base to its apex (the fifth vertex of the 4-orthoscheme, at the center of the regular 600-cell).[cl] If the regular 600-cell has unit radius and edge length , its characteristic 5-cell's ten edges have lengths , , around its exterior right-triangle face (the edges opposite the characteristic angles 𝟀, 𝝉, 𝟁),[ck] plus , , (the other three edges of the exterior 3-orthoscheme facet the characteristic tetrahedron, which are the characteristic radii of the regular tetrahedron), plus , , , (edges which are the characteristic radii of the 600-cell). The 4-edge path along orthogonal edges of the orthoscheme is , , , , first from a 600-cell vertex to a 600-cell edge center, then turning 90° to a 600-cell face center, then turning 90° to a 600-cell tetrahedral cell center, then turning 90° to the 600-cell center.
Reflections
editThe 600-cell can be constructed by the reflections of its characteristic 5-cell in its own facets (its tetrahedral mirror walls).[cm] Reflections and rotations are related: a reflection in an even number of intersecting mirrors is a rotation.[67][68] For example, a full isoclinic rotation of the 600-cell in decagonal invariant planes takes each of the 120 vertices through 15 vertices and back to itself, on a skew pentadecagram2 geodesic isocline of circumference 5𝝅 that winds around the 3-sphere, as each great decagon rotates (like a wheel) and also tilts sideways (like a coin flipping) with the completely orthogonal plane.[cn] Any set of four orthogonal pairs of antipodal vertices (the 8 vertices of one of the 75 inscribed 16-cells)[bb] performing such an orbit visits 15 * 8 = 120 distinct vertices and generates the 600-cell sequentially in one full isoclinic rotation, just as any single characteristic 5-cell reflecting itself in its own mirror walls generates the 120 vertices simultaneously by reflection.[bo]
Weyl orbits
editAnother construction method uses quaternions and the Icosahedral symmetry of Weyl group orbits of order 120.[70] The following are the orbits of weights of D4 under the Weyl group W(D4):
- O(0100) : T = {±1,±e1,±e2,±e3,(±1±e1±e2±e3)/2}
- O(1000) : V1
- O(0010) : V2
- O(0001) : V3
With quaternions where is the conjugate of and and , then the Coxeter group is the symmetry group of the 600-cell and the 120-cell of order 14400.
Given such that and as an exchange of within , we can construct:
- the snub 24-cell
- the 600-cell
- the 120-cell
Rotations
editThe regular convex 4-polytopes are an expression of their underlying symmetry which is known as SO(4), the group of rotations[71] about a fixed point in 4-dimensional Euclidean space.[cx]
The 600-cell is generated by isoclinic rotations[ao] of the 24-cell by 36° = 𝜋/5 (the arc of one 600-cell edge length).[da]
Twenty-five 24-cells
editThere are 25 inscribed 24-cells in the 600-cell.[11][co] Therefore there are also 25 inscribed snub 24-cells, 75 inscribed tesseracts and 75 inscribed 16-cells.[f]
The 8-vertex 16-cell has 4 long diameters inclined at 90° = 𝜋/2 to each other, often taken as the 4 orthogonal axes or basis of the coordinate system.
The 24-vertex 24-cell has 12 long diameters inclined at 60° = 𝜋/3 to each other: 3 disjoint sets of 4 orthogonal axes, each set comprising the diameters of one of 3 inscribed 16-cells, isoclinically rotated by 𝜋/3 with respect to each other.[db]
The 120-vertex 600-cell has 60 long diameters: not just 5 disjoint sets of 12 diameters, each comprising one of 5 inscribed 24-cells (as we might suspect by analogy), but 25 distinct but overlapping sets of 12 diameters, each comprising one of 25 inscribed 24-cells.[76] There are 5 disjoint 24-cells in the 600-cell, but not just 5: there are 10 different ways to partition the 600-cell into 5 disjoint 24-cells.[j]
Like the 16-cells and 8-cells inscribed in the 24-cell, the 25 24-cells inscribed in the 600-cell are mutually isoclinic polytopes. The rotational distance between inscribed 24-cells is always 𝜋/5 in each invariant plane of rotation.[cy]
Five 24-cells are disjoint because they are Clifford parallel: their corresponding vertices are 𝜋/5 apart on two non-intersecting Clifford parallel[af] decagonal great circles (as well as 𝜋/5 apart on the same decagonal great circle).[ae] An isoclinic rotation of decagonal planes by 𝜋/5 takes each 24-cell to a disjoint 24-cell (just as an isoclinic rotation of hexagonal planes by 𝜋/3 takes each 16-cell to a disjoint 16-cell).[dc] Each isoclinic rotation occurs in two chiral forms: there are 4 disjoint 24-cells to the left of each 24-cell, and another 4 disjoint 24-cells to its right.[de] The left and right rotations reach different 24-cells; therefore each 24-cell belongs to two different sets of five disjoint 24-cells.
All Clifford parallel polytopes are isoclinic, but not all isoclinic polytopes are Clifford parallels (completely disjoint objects).[df] Each 24-cell is isoclinic and Clifford parallel to 8 others, and isoclinic but not Clifford parallel to 16 others.[d] With each of the 16 it shares 6 vertices: a hexagonal central plane.[i] Non-disjoint 24-cells are related by a simple rotation by 𝜋/5 in an invariant plane intersecting only two vertices of the 600-cell,[au] a rotation in which the completely orthogonal fixed plane is their common hexagonal central plane. They are also related by an isoclinic rotation in which both planes rotate by 𝜋/5.[dh]
There are two kinds of 𝜋/5 isoclinic rotations which take each 24-cell to another 24-cell.[dc] Disjoint 24-cells are related by a 𝜋/5 isoclinic rotation of an entire fibration of 12 Clifford parallel decagonal invariant planes. (There are 6 such sets of fibers, and a right or a left isoclinic rotation possible with each set, so there are 12 such distinct rotations.)[de] Non-disjoint 24-cells are related by a 𝜋/5 isoclinic rotation of an entire fibration of 20 Clifford parallel hexagonal invariant planes.[dj] (There are 10 such sets of fibers, so there are 20 such distinct rotations.)[dg]
On the other hand, each of the 10 sets of five disjoint 24-cells is Clifford parallel because its corresponding great hexagons are Clifford parallel. (24-cells do not have great decagons.) The 16 great hexagons in each 24-cell can be divided into 4 sets of 4 non-intersecting Clifford parallel geodesics, each set of which covers all 24 vertices of the 24-cell. The 200 great hexagons in the 600-cell can be divided into 10 sets of 20 non-intersecting Clifford parallel geodesics, each set of which covers all 120 vertices and constitutes a discrete hexagonal fibration. Each of the 10 sets of 20 disjoint hexagons can be divided into five sets of 4 disjoint hexagons, each set of 4 covering a disjoint 24-cell. Similarly, the corresponding great squares of disjoint 24-cells are Clifford parallel.
Rotations on polygram isoclines
editThe regular convex 4-polytopes each have their characteristic kind of right (and left) isoclinic rotation, corresponding to their characteristic kind of discrete Hopf fibration of great circles.[bg] For example, the 600-cell can be fibrated six different ways into a set of Clifford parallel great decagons, so the 600-cell has six distinct right (and left) isoclinic rotations in which those great decagon planes are invariant planes of rotation. We say these isoclinic rotations are characteristic of the 600-cell because the 600-cell's edges lie in their invariant planes. These rotations only emerge in the 600-cell, although they are also found in larger regular polytopes (the 120-cell) which contain inscribed instances of the 600-cell.
Just as the geodesic polygons (decagons or hexagons or squares) in the 600-cell's central planes form fiber bundles of Clifford parallel great circles, the corresponding geodesic skew polygrams (which trace the paths on the Clifford torus of vertices under isoclinic rotation)[79] form fiber bundles of Clifford parallel isoclines: helical circles which wind through all four dimensions.[ao] Since isoclinic rotations are chiral, occurring in left-handed and right-handed forms, each polygon fiber bundle has corresponding left and right polygram fiber bundles.[80] All the fiber bundles are aspects of the same discrete Hopf fibration, because the fibration is the various expressions of the same distinct left-right pair of isoclinic rotations.
Cell rings are another expression of the Hopf fibration. Each discrete fibration has a set of cell-disjoint cell rings that tesselates the 4-polytope.[ba] The isoclines in each chiral bundle spiral around each other: they are axial geodesics of the rings of face-bonded cells. The Clifford parallel cell rings of the fibration nest into each other, pass through each other without intersecting in any cells, and exactly fill the 600-cell with their disjoint cell sets.
Isoclinic rotations rotate a rigid object's vertices along parallel paths, each vertex circling within two orthogonal moving great circles, the way a loom weaves a piece of fabric from two orthogonal sets of parallel fibers. A bundle of Clifford parallel great circle polygons and a corresponding bundle of Clifford parallel skew polygram isoclines are the warp and woof of the same distinct left or right isoclinic rotation, which takes Clifford parallel great circle polygons to each other, flipping them like coins and rotating them through a Clifford parallel set of central planes. Meanwhile, because the polygons are also rotating individually like wheels, vertices are displaced along helical Clifford parallel isoclines (the chords of which form the skew polygram), through vertices which lie in successive Clifford parallel polygons.[bf]
In the 600-cell, each family of isoclinic skew polygrams (moving vertex paths in the decagon {10}, hexagon {6}, or square {4} great polygon rotations) can be divided into bundles of non-intersecting Clifford parallel polygram isoclines.[81] The isocline bundles occur in pairs of left and right chirality; the isoclines in each rotation act as chiral objects, as does each distinct isoclinic rotation itself.[az] Each fibration contains an equal number of left and right isoclines, in two disjoint bundles, which trace the paths of the 600-cell's vertices during the fibration's left or right isoclinic rotation respectively. Each left or right fiber bundle of isoclines by itself constitutes a discrete Hopf fibration which fills the entire 600-cell, visiting all 120 vertices just once. It is a different bundle of fibers than the bundle of Clifford parallel polygon great circles, but the two fiber bundles describe the same discrete fibration because they enumerate those 120 vertices together in the same distinct right (or left) isoclinic rotation, by their intersection as a fabric of cross-woven parallel fibers.
Each isoclinic rotation involves pairs of completely orthogonal invariant central planes of rotation, which both rotate through the same angle. There are two ways they can do this: by both rotating in the "same" direction, or by rotating in "opposite" directions (according to the right hand rule by which we conventionally say which way is "up" on each of the 4 coordinate axes). The right polygram and right isoclinic rotation conventionally correspond to invariant pairs rotating in the same direction; the left polygram and left isoclinic rotation correspond to pairs rotating in opposite directions.[78] Left and right isoclines are different paths that go to different places. In addition, each distinct isoclinic rotation (left or right) can be performed in a positive or negative direction along the circular parallel fibers.
A fiber bundle of Clifford parallel isoclines is the set of helical vertex circles described by a distinct left or right isoclinic rotation. Each moving vertex travels along an isocline contained within a (moving) cell ring. While the left and right isoclinic rotations each double-rotate the same set of Clifford parallel invariant planes of rotation, they step through different sets of great circle polygons because left and right isoclinic rotations hit alternate vertices of the great circle {2p} polygon (where p is a prime ≤ 5).[dl] The left and right rotation share the same Hopf bundle of {2p} polygon fibers, which is both a left and right bundle, but they have different bundles of {p} polygons[82] because the discrete fibers are opposing left and right {p} polygons inscribed in the {2p} polygon.[dm]
A simple rotation is direct and local, taking some vertices to adjacent vertices along great circles, and some central planes to other central planes within the same hyperplane. (The 600-cell has four orthogonal central hyperplanes, each of which is an icosidodecahedron.) In a simple rotation, there is just a single pair of completely orthogonal invariant central planes of rotation; it does not constitute a fibration.
An isoclinic rotation is diagonal and global, taking all the vertices to non-adjacent vertices (two or more edge-lengths away)[cq] along diagonal isoclines, and all the central plane polygons to Clifford parallel polygons (of the same kind). A left-right pair of isoclinic rotations constitutes a discrete fibration. All the Clifford parallel central planes of the fibration are invariant planes of rotation, separated by two equal angles and lying in different hyperplanes.[at] The diagonal isocline[cr] is a shorter route between the non-adjacent vertices than the multiple simple routes between them available along edges: it is the shortest route on the 3-sphere, the geodesic.
Decagons and pentadecagrams
editThe fibrations of the 600-cell include 6 fibrations of its 72 great decagons: 6 fiber bundles of 12 great decagons,[ae] each delineating 20 chiral cell rings of 30 tetrahedral cells each,[ad] with three great decagons bounding each cell ring, and five cell rings nesting together around each decagon. The 12 Clifford parallel decagons in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel decagons are spanned by edges of other great decagons.[aq] Each fibration corresponds to a distinct left (and right) isoclinic rotation of the 600-cell in 12 great decagon invariant planes on 5𝝅 isoclines.
The bundle of 12 Clifford parallel decagon fibers is divided into a bundle of 12 left pentagon fibers and a bundle of 12 right pentagon fibers, with each left-right pair of pentagons inscribed in a decagon.[83] 12 great polygons comprise a fiber bundle covering all 120 vertices in a discrete Hopf fibration. There are 20 cell-disjoint 30-cell rings in the fibration, but only 4 completely disjoint 30-cell rings.[g] The 600-cell has six such discrete decagonal fibrations, and each is the domain (container) of a unique left-right pair of isoclinic rotations (left and right fiber bundles of 12 great pentagons).[dn] Each great decagon belongs to just one fibration,[82] but each 30-cell ring belongs to 5 of the six fibrations (and is completely disjoint from 1 other fibration). The 600-cell contains 72 great decagons, divided among six fibrations, each of which is a set of 20 cell-disjoint 30-cell rings (4 completely disjoint 30-cell rings), but the 600-cell has only 20 distinct 30-cell rings altogether. Each 30-cell ring contains 3 of the 12 Clifford parallel decagons in each of 5 fibrations, and 30 of the 120 vertices.
In these decagonal isoclinic rotations, vertices travel along isoclines which follow the edges of hexagons,[26] advancing a pythagorean distance of one hexagon edge in each double 36°×36° rotational unit.[dj] In an isoclinic rotation, each successive hexagon edge travelled lies in a different great hexagon, so the isocline describes a skew polygram, not a polygon. In a 60°×60° isoclinic rotation (as in the 24-cell's characteristic hexagonal rotation, and below in the hexagonal rotations of the 600-cell) this polygram is a hexagram: the isoclinic rotation follows a 6-edge circular path, just as a simple hexagonal rotation does, although it takes two revolutions to enumerate all the vertices in it, because the isocline is a double loop through every other vertex, and its chords are √3 chords of the hexagon instead of √1 hexagon edges.[dq] But in the 600-cell's 36°×36° characteristic decagonal rotation, successive great hexagons are closer together and more numerous, and the isocline polygram formed by their 15 hexagon edges is a pentadecagram (15-gram).[cn] It is not only not the same period as the hexagon or the simple decagonal rotation, it is not even an integer multiple of the period of the hexagon, or the decagon, or either's simple rotation. Only the compound {30/4}=2{15/2} triacontagram (30-gram), which is two 15-grams rotating in parallel (a black and a white), is a multiple of them all, and so constitutes the rotational unit of the decagonal isoclinic rotation.[dl]
In the 30-cell ring, the non-adjacent vertices linked by isoclinic rotations are two edge-lengths apart, with three other vertices of the ring lying between them.[ds] The two non-adjacent vertices are linked by a √1 chord of the isocline which is a great hexagon edge (a 24-cell edge). The √1 chords of the 30-cell ring (without the √0.𝚫 600-cell edges) form a skew triacontagram{30/4}=2{15/2} which contains 2 disjoint {15/2} Möbius double loops, a left-right pair of pentadecagram2 isoclines. Each left (or right) bundle of 12 pentagon fibers is crossed by a left (or right) bundle of 8 Clifford parallel pentadecagram fibers. Each distinct 30-cell ring has 2 double-loop pentadecagram isoclines running through its even or odd (black or white) vertices respectively.[cu] The pentadecagram helices have no inherent chirality, but each acts as either a left or right isocline in any distinct isoclinic rotation.[dk] The 2 pentadecagram fibers belong to the left and right fiber bundles of 5 different fibrations.
At each vertex, there are six great decagons and six pentadecagram isoclines (six black or six white) that cross at the vertex.[dv] Eight pentadecagram isoclines (four black and four white) comprise a unique right (or left) fiber bundle of isoclines covering all 120 vertices in the distinct right (or left) isoclinic rotation. Each fibration has a unique left and right isoclinic rotation, and corresponding unique left and right fiber bundles of 12 pentagons and 8 pentadecagram isoclines. There are only 20 distinct black isoclines and 20 distinct white isoclines in the 600-cell. Each distinct isocline belongs to 5 fiber bundles.
Three sets of 30-cell ring chords from the same orthogonal projection viewpoint | |||
---|---|---|---|
Pentadecagram {15/2} | Triacontagram {30/4}=2{15/2} | Triacontagram {30/6}=6{5} | |
All edges are pentadecagram isocline chords of length √1, which are also great hexagon edges of 24-cells inscribed in the 600-cell. | Only great pentagon edges of length √1.𝚫 ≈ 1.176. | ||
A single black (or white) isocline is a Möbius double loop skew pentadecagram {15/2} of circumference 5𝝅.[cn] The √1 chords are 24-cell edges (hexagon edges) from different inscribed 24-cells. These chords are invisible (not shown) in the 30-cell ring illustration, where they join opposite vertices of two face-bonded tetrahedral cells that are two orange edges apart or two yellow edges apart. | The 30-cell ring as a skew compound of two disjoint pentadecagram {15/2} isoclines (a black-white pair, shown here as orange-yellow).[cu] The √1 chords of the isoclines link every 4th vertex of the 30-cell ring in a straight chord under two orange edges or two yellow edges. The doubly-curved isocline is the geodesic (shortest path) between those vertices; they are also two edges apart by three different angled paths along the edges of the face-bonded tetrahedra. | Each pentadecagram isocline (at left) intersects all six great pentagons (above) in two or three vertices. The pentagons lie on flat 2𝝅 great circles in the decagon invariant planes of rotation. The pentadecagrams are not flat: they are helical 5𝝅 isocline circles whose 15 chords lie in successive great hexagon planes inclined at 𝝅/5 = 36° to each other. The isocline circle is said to be twisting either left or right with the rotation, but all such pentadecagrams are directly congruent, each acting as a left or right isocline in different fibrations. | |
No 600-cell edges appear in these illustrations, only invisible interior chords of the 600-cell. In this article, they should all properly be drawn as dashed lines. |
Two 15-gram double-loop isoclines are axial to each 30-cell ring. The 30-cell rings are chiral; each fibration contains 10 right (clockwise-spiraling) rings and 10 left (counterclockwise spiraling) rings, but the two isoclines in each 3-cell ring are directly congruent.[cv] Each acts as a left (or right) isocline a left (or right) rotation, but has no inherent chirality.[dk] The fibration's 20 left and 20 right 15-grams altogether contain 120 disjoint open pentagrams (60 left and 60 right), the open ends of which are adjacent 600-cell vertices (one √0.𝚫 edge-length apart). The 30 chords joining the isocline's 30 vertices are √1 hexagon edges (24-cell edges), connecting 600-cell vertices which are two 600-cell √0.𝚫 edges apart on a decagon great circle. [cs] These isocline chords are both hexagon edges and pentagram edges.
The 20 Clifford parallel isoclines (30-cell ring axes) of each left (or right) isocline bundle do not intersect each other. Either distinct decagonal isoclinic rotation (left or right) rotates all 120 vertices (and all 600 cells), but pentadecagram isoclines and pentagons are connected such that vertices alternate as 60 black and 60 white vertices (and 300 black and 300 white cells), like the black and white squares of the chessboard.[du] In the course of the rotation, the vertices on a left (or right) isocline rotate within the same 15-vertex black (or white) isocline, and the cells rotate within the same black (or white) 30-cell ring.
Hexagons and hexagrams
editThe fibrations of the 600-cell include 10 fibrations of its 200 great hexagons: 10 fiber bundles of 20 great hexagons. The 20 Clifford parallel hexagons in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel hexagons are spanned by edges of great decagons.[ar] Each fibration corresponds to a distinct left (and right) isoclinic rotation of the 600-cell in 20 great hexagon invariant planes on 4𝝅 isoclines.
Each fiber bundle delineates 20 disjoint directly congruent cell rings of 6 octahedral cells each, with three cell rings nesting together around each hexagon. The bundle of 20 Clifford parallel hexagon fibers is divided into a bundle of 20 black √3 great triangle fibers and a bundle of 20 white great triangle fibers, with a black and a white triangle inscribed in each hexagon and 6 black and 6 white triangles in each 6-octahedron ring. The black or white triangles are joined by three intersecting black or white isoclines, each of which is a special kind of helical great circle[dq] through the corresponding vertices in 10 Clifford parallel black (or white) great triangles. The 10 √1.𝚫 chords of each isocline form a skew decagram {10/3}, 10 great pentagon edges joined end-to-end in a helical loop, winding 3 times around the 600-cell through all four dimensions rather than lying flat in a central plane. Each pair of black and white isoclines (intersecting antipodal great hexagon vertices) forms a compound 20-gon icosagram {20/6}=2{10/3}.
Notice the relation between the 24-cell's characteristic rotation in great hexagon invariant planes (on hexagram isoclines), and the 600-cell's own version of the rotation of great hexagon planes (on decagram isoclines). They are exactly the same isoclinic rotation: they have the same isocline. They have different numbers of the same isocline, and the 600-cell's √1.𝚫 isocline chord is shorter than the 24-cell's √3 isocline chord because the isocline intersects more vertices in the 600-cell (10) than it does in the 24-cell (6), but both Clifford polygrams have a 4𝝅 circumference.[dp] They have different isocline polygrams only because the isocline curve intersects more vertices in the 600-cell than it does in the 24-cell.[dy]
Squares and octagrams
editThe fibrations of the 600-cell include 15 fibrations of its 450 great squares: 15 fiber bundles of 30 great squares. The 30 Clifford parallel squares in each bundle are completely disjoint. Adjacent parallel squares are spanned by edges of great decagons.[as] Each fibration corresponds to a distinct left (and right) isoclinic rotation of the 600-cell in 30 great square invariant planes (15 completely orthogonal pairs) on 4𝝅 isoclines.
Each fiber bundle delineates 30 chiral cell rings of 8 tetrahedral cells each,[ax] with a left and right cell ring nesting together to fill each of the 15 disjoint 16-cells inscribed in the 600-cell. Axial to each 8-tetrahedron ring is a special kind of helical great circle, an isocline.[ao] In a left (or right) isoclinic rotation of the 600-cell in great square invariant planes, all the vertices circulate on one of 15 Clifford parallel isoclines.
The 30 Clifford parallel squares in each bundle are joined by four Clifford parallel 24-gram isoclines (one through each vertex), each of which intersects one vertex in 24 of the 30 squares, and all 24 vertices of just one of the 600-cell's 25 24-cells. Each isocline is a 24-gram circuit intersecting all 25 24-cells, 24 of them just once and one of them 24 times. The 24 vertices in each 24-gram isocline comprise a unique 24-cell; there are 25 such distinct isoclines in the 600-cell. Each isocline is a skew {24/5} 24-gram, 24 φ = √2.𝚽 chords joined end-to-end in a helical loop, winding 5 times around one 24-cell through all four dimensions rather than lying flat in a central plane. Adjacent vertices of the 24-cell are one √1 chord apart, and 5 φ chords apart on its isocline. A left (or right) isoclinic rotation through 720° takes each 24-cell to and through every other 24-cell.
Notice the relations between the 16-cell's rotation of just 2 invariant great square planes, the 24-cell's rotation in 6 Clifford parallel great squares, and this rotation of the 600-cell in 30 Clifford parallel great squares. These three rotations are the same rotation, taking place on exactly the same kind of isocline circles, which happen to intersect more vertices in the 600-cell (24) than they do in the 16-cell (8).[dz] In the 16-cell's rotation the distance between vertices on an isocline curve is the √4 diameter. In the 600-cell vertices are closer together, and its √2.𝚽 = φ chord is the distance between adjacent vertices on the same isocline, but all these isoclines have a 4𝝅 circumference.
As a configuration
editThis configuration matrix[87] represents the 600-cell. The rows and columns correspond to vertices, edges, faces, and cells. The diagonal numbers say how many of each element occur in the whole 600-cell. The non-diagonal numbers say how many of the column's element occur in or at the row's element.
Here is the configuration expanded with k-face elements and k-figures. The diagonal element counts are the ratio of the full Coxeter group order, 14400, divided by the order of the subgroup with mirror removal.
H4 | k-face | fk | f0 | f1 | f2 | f3 | k-fig | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
H3 | ( ) | f0 | 120 | 12 | 30 | 20 | {3,5} | H4/H3 = 14400/120 = 120 | |
A1H2 | { } | f1 | 2 | 720 | 5 | 5 | {5} | H4/H2A1 = 14400/10/2 = 720 | |
A2A1 | {3} | f2 | 3 | 3 | 1200 | 2 | { } | H4/A2A1 = 14400/6/2 = 1200 | |
A3 | {3,3} | f3 | 4 | 6 | 4 | 600 | ( ) | H4/A3 = 14400/24 = 600 |
Symmetries
editThe icosians are a specific set of Hamiltonian quaternions with the same symmetry as the 600-cell.[88] The icosians lie in the golden field, (a + b√5) + (c + d√5)i + (e + f√5)j + (g + h√5)k, where the eight variables are rational numbers.[89] The finite sums of the 120 unit icosians are called the icosian ring.
When interpreted as quaternions,[b] the 120 vertices of the 600-cell form a group under quaternionic multiplication. This group is often called the binary icosahedral group and denoted by 2I as it is the double cover of the ordinary icosahedral group I.[90] It occurs twice in the rotational symmetry group RSG of the 600-cell as an invariant subgroup, namely as the subgroup 2IL of quaternion left-multiplications and as the subgroup 2IR of quaternion right-multiplications. Each rotational symmetry of the 600-cell is generated by specific elements of 2IL and 2IR; the pair of opposite elements generate the same element of RSG. The centre of RSG consists of the non-rotation Id and the central inversion −Id. We have the isomorphism RSG ≅ (2IL × 2IR) / {Id, -Id}. The order of RSG equals 120 × 120/2 = 7200. The quaternion algebra as a tool for the treatment of 3D and 4D rotations, and as a road to the full understanding of the theory of rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space, is described by Mebius.[91]
The binary icosahedral group is isomorphic to SL(2,5).
The full symmetry group of the 600-cell is the Coxeter group H4.[92] This is a group of order 14400. It consists of 7200 rotations and 7200 rotation-reflections. The rotations form an invariant subgroup of the full symmetry group. The rotational symmetry group was first described by S.L. van Oss.[93] The H4 group and its Clifford algebra construction from 3-dimensional symmetry groups by induction is described by Dechant.[94]
Visualization
editThe symmetries of the 3-D surface of the 600-cell are somewhat difficult to visualize due to both the large number of tetrahedral cells,[v] and the fact that the tetrahedron has no opposing faces or vertices.[az] One can start by realizing the 600-cell is the dual of the 120-cell. One may also notice that the 600-cell also contains the vertices of a dodecahedron,[44] which with some effort can be seen in most of the below perspective projections.
2D projections
editThe H3 decagonal projection shows the plane of the van Oss polygon.
H4 | - | F4 |
---|---|---|
[30] (Red=1) |
[20] (Red=1) |
[12] (Red=1) |
H3 | A2 / B3 / D4 | A3 / B2 |
[10] (Red=1,orange=5,yellow=10) |
[6] (Red=1,orange=3,yellow=6) |
[4] (Red=1,orange=2,yellow=4) |
3D projections
editA three-dimensional model of the 600-cell, in the collection of the Institut Henri Poincaré, was photographed in 1934–1935 by Man Ray, and formed part of two of his later "Shakesperean Equation" paintings.[95]
Frame synchronized orthogonal isometric (left) and perspective (right) projections |
---|
Diminished 600-cells
editThe snub 24-cell may be obtained from the 600-cell by removing the vertices of an inscribed 24-cell and taking the convex hull of the remaining vertices.[96] This process is a diminishing of the 600-cell.
The grand antiprism may be obtained by another diminishing of the 600-cell: removing 20 vertices that lie on two mutually orthogonal rings and taking the convex hull of the remaining vertices.[59]
A bi-24-diminished 600-cell, with all tridiminished icosahedron cells has 48 vertices removed, leaving 72 of 120 vertices of the 600-cell. The dual of a bi-24-diminished 600-cell, is a tri-24-diminished 600-cell, with 48 vertices and 72 hexahedron cells.
There are a total of 314,248,344 diminishings of the 600-cell by non-adjacent vertices. All of these consist of regular tetrahedral and icosahedral cells.[97]
Diminished 600-cells | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Tri-24-diminished 600-cell | Bi-24-diminished 600-cell | Snub 24-cell (24-diminished 600-cell) |
Grand antiprism (20-diminished 600-cell) |
600-cell | ||||||
Vertices | 48 | 72 | 96 | 100 | 120 | ||||||
Vertex figure (Symmetry) |
dual of tridiminished icosahedron ([3], order 6) |
tetragonal antiwedge ([2]+, order 2) |
tridiminished icosahedron ([3], order 6) |
bidiminished icosahedron ([2], order 4) |
Icosahedron ([5,3], order 120) | ||||||
Symmetry | Order 144 (48×3 or 72×2) | [3+,4,3] Order 576 (96×6) |
[10,2+,10] Order 400 (100×4) |
[5,3,3] Order 14400 (120×120) | |||||||
Net | |||||||||||
Ortho H4 plane |
|||||||||||
Ortho F4 plane |
Related polytopes and honeycombs
editThe 600-cell is one of 15 regular and uniform polytopes with the same H4 symmetry [3,3,5]:[11]
H4 family polytopes | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
120-cell | rectified 120-cell |
truncated 120-cell |
cantellated 120-cell |
runcinated 120-cell |
cantitruncated 120-cell |
runcitruncated 120-cell |
omnitruncated 120-cell | ||||
{5,3,3} | r{5,3,3} | t{5,3,3} | rr{5,3,3} | t0,3{5,3,3} | tr{5,3,3} | t0,1,3{5,3,3} | t0,1,2,3{5,3,3} | ||||
600-cell | rectified 600-cell |
truncated 600-cell |
cantellated 600-cell |
bitruncated 600-cell |
cantitruncated 600-cell |
runcitruncated 600-cell |
omnitruncated 600-cell | ||||
{3,3,5} | r{3,3,5} | t{3,3,5} | rr{3,3,5} | 2t{3,3,5} | tr{3,3,5} | t0,1,3{3,3,5} | t0,1,2,3{3,3,5} |
It is similar to three regular 4-polytopes: the 5-cell {3,3,3}, 16-cell {3,3,4} of Euclidean 4-space, and the order-6 tetrahedral honeycomb {3,3,6} of hyperbolic space. All of these have tetrahedral cells.
{3,3,p} polytopes | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Space | S3 | H3 | |||||||||
Form | Finite | Paracompact | Noncompact | ||||||||
Name | {3,3,3} |
{3,3,4} |
{3,3,5} |
{3,3,6} |
{3,3,7} |
{3,3,8} |
... {3,3,∞} | ||||
Image | |||||||||||
Vertex figure |
{3,3} |
{3,4} |
{3,5} |
{3,6} |
{3,7} |
{3,8} |
{3,∞} |
This 4-polytope is a part of a sequence of 4-polytope and honeycombs with icosahedron vertex figures:
{p,3,5} polytopes | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Space | S3 | H3 | |||||
Form | Finite | Compact | Paracompact | Noncompact | |||
Name | {3,3,5} |
{4,3,5} |
{5,3,5} |
{6,3,5} |
{7,3,5} |
{8,3,5} |
... {∞,3,5} |
Image | |||||||
Cells | {3,3} |
{4,3} |
{5,3} |
{6,3} |
{7,3} |
{8,3} |
{∞,3} |
The regular complex polygons 3{5}3, and 5{3}5, , in have a real representation as 600-cell in 4-dimensional space. Both have 120 vertices, and 120 edges. The first has Complex reflection group 3[5]3, order 360, and the second has symmetry 5[3]5, order 600.[98]
Regular complex polytope in orthogonal projection of H4 Coxeter plane[17] | ||
---|---|---|
{3,3,5} Order 14400 |
3{5}3 Order 360 |
5{3}5 Order 600 |
See also
edit- 24-cell, the predecessor 4-polytope on which the 600-cell is based
- 120-cell, the dual 4-polytope to the 600-cell, and its successor
- Uniform 4-polytope family with [5,3,3] symmetry
- Regular 4-polytope
- Polytope
Notes
edit- ^ a b c The convex regular 4-polytopes can be ordered by size as a measure of 4-dimensional content (hypervolume) for the same radius. This is their proper order of enumeration, the order in which they nest inside each other as compounds.[3] Each greater polytope in the sequence is rounder than its predecessor, enclosing more content[4] within the same radius. The 4-simplex (5-cell) is the limit smallest case, and the 120-cell is the largest. Complexity (as measured by comparing configuration matrices or simply the number of vertices) follows the same ordering. This provides an alternative numerical naming scheme for regular polytopes in which the 600-cell is the 120-point 4-polytope: fifth in the ascending sequence that runs from 5-point 4-polytope to 600-point 4-polytope.
- ^ a b In four-dimensional Euclidean geometry, a quaternion is simply a (w, x, y, z) Cartesian coordinate.
- ^ a b c
The 600-cell geometry is based on the 24-cell.
The 600-cell rounds out the 24-cell with 2 more great circle polygons (exterior decagon and interior pentagon), adding 4 more chord lengths which alternate with the 24-cell's 4 chord lengths. - ^ a b c d e f A 24-cell contains 16 hexagons. In the 600-cell, with 25 24-cells, each 24-cell is disjoint from 8 24-cells and intersects each of the other 16 24-cells in six vertices that form a hexagon.[12] A 600-cell contains 25・16/2 = 200 such hexagons.
- ^ In cases where inscribed 4-polytopes of the same kind occupy disjoint sets of vertices (such as the two 16-cells inscribed in the tesseract, or the three 16-cells inscribed in the 24-cell), their sets of vertex chords, central polygons and cells must likewise be disjoint. In the cases where they share vertices (such as the three tesseracts inscribed in the 24-cell, or the 25 24-cells inscribed in the 600-cell), they also share some vertex chords and central polygons.[d]
- ^ a b c d e The 600-cell contains exactly 25 24-cells, 75 16-cells and 75 8-cells, with each 16-cell and each 8-cell lying in just one 24-cell.[21]
- ^ a b c d e f g Polytopes are completely disjoint if all their element sets are disjoint: they do not share any vertices, edges, faces or cells. They may still overlap in space, sharing 4-content, volume, area, or lineage.
- ^ Each of the 25 24-cells of the 600-cell contains exactly one vertex of each great pentagon.[12] Six pentagons intersect at each 600-cell vertex, so each 24-cell intersects all 144 great pentagons.
- ^ a b c d e f Five 24-cells meet at each icosahedral pyramid apex[p] of the 600-cell. Each 24-cell shares not just one vertex but 6 vertices (one of its four hexagonal central planes) with each of the other four 24-cells.[d]
- ^ a b c Schoute was the first to state (a century ago) that there are exactly ten ways to partition the 120 vertices of the 600-cell into five disjoint 24-cells. The 25 24-cells can be placed in a 5 x 5 array such that each row and each column of the array partitions the 120 vertices of the 600-cell into five disjoint 24-cells. The rows and columns of the array are the only ten such partitions of the 600-cell.[21]
- ^ a b c d e The 600-cell contains 25 distinct 24-cells, bound to each other by pentagonal rings. Each pentagon links five completely disjoint[g] 24-cells together, the collective vertices of which are the 120 vertices of the 600-cell. Each 24-point 24-cell contains one fifth of all the vertices in the 120-point 600-cell, and is linked to the other 96 vertices (which comprise a snub 24-cell) by the 600-cell's 144 pentagons. Each of the 25 24-cells intersects each of the 144 great pentagons at just one vertex.[h] Five 24-cells meet at each 600-cell vertex,[i] so all 25 24-cells are linked by each great pentagon. The 600-cell can be partitioned into five disjoint 24-cells (10 different ways),[j] and also into 24 disjoint pentagons (inscribed in the 12 Clifford parallel great decagons of one of the 6 decagonal fibrations) by choosing a pentagon from the same fibration at each 24-cell vertex.
- ^ The angles 𝜉i and 𝜉j are angles of rotation in the two completely orthogonal invariant planes which characterize rotations in 4-dimensional Euclidean space. The angle 𝜂 is the inclination of both these planes from the polar axis, where 𝜂 ranges from 0 to 𝜋/2. The (𝜉i, 0, 𝜉j) coordinates describe the great circles which intersect at the north and south pole ("lines of longitude"). The (𝜉i, 𝜋/2, 𝜉j) coordinates describe the great circles orthogonal to longitude ("equators"); there is more than one "equator" great circle in a 4-polytope, as the equator of a 3-sphere is a whole 2-sphere of great circles. The other Hopf coordinates (𝜉i, 0 < 𝜂 < 𝜋/2, 𝜉j) describe the great circles (not "lines of latitude") which cross an equator but do not pass through the north or south pole.
- ^ The conversion from Hopf coordinates (𝜉i, 𝜂, 𝜉j) to unit-radius Cartesian coordinates (w, x, y, z) is:
- w = cos 𝜉i sin 𝜂
- x = cos 𝜉j cos 𝜂
- y = sin 𝜉j cos 𝜂
- z = sin 𝜉i sin 𝜂
- ^ The Hopf coordinates are triples of three angles:
- (𝜉i, 𝜂, 𝜉j)
- ^ There are 600 permutations of these coordinates, but there are only 120 vertices in the 600-cell. These are actually the Hopf coordinates of the vertices of the 120-cell, which has 600 vertices and can be seen (two different ways) as a compound of 5 disjoint 600-cells.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i In the curved 3-dimensional space of the 600-cell's boundary surface, at each vertex one finds the twelve nearest other vertices surrounding the vertex the way an icosahedron's vertices surround its center. Twelve 600-cell edges converge at the icosahedron's center, where they appear to form six straight lines which cross there. However, the center is actually displaced in the 4th dimension (radially outward from the center of the 600-cell), out of the hyperplane defined by the icosahedron's vertices. Thus the vertex icosahedron is actually a canonical icosahedral pyramid,[bj] composed of 20 regular tetrahedra on a regular icosahedron base, and the vertex is its apex.[bk]
- ^ a b c The fractional-root golden chords are irrational fractions that are functions of √5. They exemplify that the golden ratio φ = 1 + √5/2 ≈ 1.618 is a circle ratio related to 𝜋:[20]
- 𝜋/5 = arccos (φ/2)
- φ = 1 – 2 cos (3𝜋/5)
- ^ a b The 600-cell edges are decagon edges of length √0.𝚫, which is 𝚽, the smaller golden section of √5; the edges are in the inverse golden ratio 1/φ to the √1 hexagon chords (the 24-cell edges). The other fractional-root chords exhibit golden relationships as well. The chord of length √1.𝚫 is a pentagon edge. The next fractional-root chord is a decagon diagonal of length √2.𝚽 which is φ, the larger golden section of √5; it is in the golden ratio[q] to the √1 chord (and the radius).[t] The last fractional-root chord is the pentagon diagonal of length √3.𝚽. The diagonal of a regular pentagon is always in the golden ratio to its edge, and indeed φ√1.𝚫 is √3.𝚽.
- ^ The fractional square roots are given as decimal fractions where:
𝚽 ≈ 0.618 is the inverse golden ratio
𝚫 = 1 - 𝚽 = 𝚽2 ≈ 0.382
For example:
𝚽 = √0.𝚫 = √0.382~ ≈ 0.618 - ^ Notice in the diagram how the φ chord (the larger golden section) sums with the adjacent 𝚽 edge (the smaller golden section) to √5, as if together they were a √5 chord bent to fit inside the √4 diameter.
- ^ a b Consider one of the 24-vertex 24-cells inscribed in the 120-vertex 600-cell. The other 96 vertices constitute a snub 24-cell. Removing any one 24-cell from the 600-cell produces a snub 24-cell.
- ^ a b c Each tetrahedral cell touches, in some manner, 56 other cells. One cell contacts each of the four faces; two cells contact each of the six edges, but not a face; and ten cells contact each of the four vertices, but not a face or edge.
- ^ The long radius (center to vertex) of the 24-cell is equal to its edge length; thus its long diameter (vertex to opposite vertex) is 2 edge lengths. Only a few uniform polytopes have this property, including the four-dimensional 24-cell and tesseract, the three-dimensional cuboctahedron, and the two-dimensional hexagon. (The cuboctahedron is the equatorial cross section of the 24-cell, and the hexagon is the equatorial cross section of the cuboctahedron.) Radially equilateral polytopes are those which can be constructed, with their long radii, from equilateral triangles which meet at the center of the polytope, each contributing two radii and an edge.
- ^ a b An orthoscheme is a chiral irregular simplex with right triangle faces that is characteristic of some polytope if it will exactly fill that polytope with the reflections of itself in its own facets (its mirror walls). Every regular polytope can be dissected radially into instances of its characteristic orthoscheme surrounding its center. The characteristic orthoscheme has the shape described by the same Coxeter-Dynkin diagram as the regular polytope without the generating point ring.
- ^ The orthoscheme is the generalization of the right triangle to simplex figures of any number of dimensions. Every regular polytope can be radially subdivided into identical characteristic orthoschemes which meet at its center.[x]
- ^ All polytopes can be radially triangulated into triangles which meet at their center, each triangle contributing two radii and one edge. There are (at least) three special classes of polytopes which are radially triangular by a special kind of triangle. The radially equilateral polytopes can be constructed from identical equilateral triangles which all meet at the center.[w] The radially golden polytopes can be constructed from identical golden triangles which all meet at the center. All the regular polytopes are radially right polytopes which can be constructed, with their various element centers and radii, from identical characteristic orthoschemes which all meet at the center, subdividing the regular polytope into characteristic right triangles which meet at the center.[y]
- ^ The long radius (center to vertex) of the 600-cell is in the golden ratio to its edge length; thus its radius is φ if its edge length is 1, and its edge length is 1/φ if its radius is 1.
- ^ a b Beginning with the 16-cell, every regular convex 4-polytope in the unit-radius sequence is inscribed in its successor.[6] Therefore the successor may be constructed by placing 4-pyramids of some kind on the cells of its predecessor. Between the 16-cell and the tesseract, we have 16 right tetrahedral pyramids, with their apexes filling the corners of the tesseract. Between the tesseract and the 24-cell, we have 8 canonical cubic pyramids. But if we place 24 canonical octahedral pyramids on the 24-cell, we only get another tesseract (of twice the radius and edge length), not the successor 600-cell. Between the 24-cell and the 600-cell there must be 24 smaller, irregular 4-pyramids on a regular octahedral base.
- ^ a b c d e The six great decagons which pass by each tetrahedral cell along its edges do not all intersect with each other, because the 6 edges of the tetrahedron do not all share a vertex. Each decagon intersects four of the others (at 60 degrees), but just misses one of the others as they run past each other (at 90 degrees) along the opposite and perpendicular skew edges of the tetrahedron. Each tetrahedron links three pairs of decagons which do not intersect at a vertex of the tetrahedron. However, none of the six decagons are Clifford parallel;[af] each belongs to a different Hopf fiber bundle of 12. Only one of the tetrahedron's six edges may be part of a helix in any one Boerdijk–Coxeter triple helix ring.[ad] Incidentally, this footnote is one of a tetrahedron of four footnotes about Clifford parallel decagons[ae] that all reference each other.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Since tetrahedra[ac] do not have opposing faces, the only way they can be stacked face-to-face in a straight line is in the form of a twisted chain called a Boerdijk-Coxeter helix. This is a Clifford parallel[af] triple helix as shown in the illustration. In the 600-cell we find them bent in the fourth dimension into geodesic rings. Each ring has 30 cells and touches 30 vertices. The cells are each face-bonded to two adjacent cells, but one of the six edges of each tetrahedron belongs only to that cell, and these 30 edges form 3 Clifford parallel great decagons which spiral around each other.[ae] 5 30-cell rings meet at and spiral around each decagon (as 5 tetrahedra meet at each edge). A bundle of 20 such cell-disjoint rings fills the entire 600-cell, thus constituting a discrete Hopf fibration. There are 6 distinct such Hopf fibrations, covering the same space but running in different "directions".
- ^ a b c d e f g Two Clifford parallel[af] great decagons don't intersect, but their corresponding vertices are linked by one edge of another decagon. The two parallel decagons and the ten linking edges form a double helix ring. Three decagons can also be parallel (decagons come in parallel fiber bundles of 12) and three of them may form a triple helix ring. If the ring is cut and laid out flat in 3-space, it is a Boerdijk–Coxeter helix[ad] 30 tetrahedra[ac] long. The three Clifford parallel decagons can be seen as the cyan edges in the triple helix illustration. Each magenta edge is one edge of another decagon linking two parallel decagons.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Clifford parallels are non-intersecting curved lines that are parallel in the sense that the perpendicular (shortest) distance between them is the same at each point. A double helix is an example of Clifford parallelism in ordinary 3-dimensional Euclidean space. In 4-space Clifford parallels occur as geodesic great circles on the 3-sphere.[23] Whereas in 3-dimensional space, any two geodesic great circles on the 2-sphere will always intersect at two antipodal points, in 4-dimensional space not all great circles intersect; various sets of Clifford parallel non-intersecting geodesic great circles can be found on the 3-sphere. They spiral around each other in Hopf fiber bundles which, in the 600-cell, visit all 120 vertices just once. For example, each of the 600 tetrahedra participates in 6 great decagons[ac] belonging to 6 discrete Hopf fibrations, each filling the whole 600-cell. Each fibration is a bundle of 12 Clifford parallel decagons which form 20 cell-disjoint intertwining rings of 30 tetrahedral cells,[ad] each bounded by three of the 12 great decagons.[ae]
- ^ The 10 hexagons which cross at each vertex lie along the 20 short radii of the icosahedral vertex figure.[p]
- ^ a b The 25 inscribed 24-cells each have 3 inscribed tesseracts, which each have 8 √1 cubic cells. The 1200 √3 chords are the 4 long diameters of these 600 cubes. The three tesseracts in each 24-cell overlap, and each √3 chord is a long diameter of two different cubes, in two different tesseracts, in two different 24-cells. Each cube belongs to just one tesseract in just one 24-cell.
- ^ The sum of 0.𝚫・720 + 1・1200 + 1.𝚫・720 + 2・1800 + 2.𝚽・720 + 3・1200 + 3.𝚽・720 + 4・60 is 14,400.
- ^ The sum of the squared lengths of all the distinct chords of any regular convex n-polytope of unit radius is the square of the number of vertices.[28]
- ^ A triacontagon or 30-gon is a thirty-sided polygon. The triacontagon is the largest regular polygon whose interior angle is the sum of the interior angles of smaller polygons: 168° is the sum of the interior angles of the equilateral triangle (60°) and the regular pentagon (108°).
- ^ a b c The 600-cell has 72 great 30-gons: 6 sets of 12 Clifford parallel 30-gon central planes, each completely orthogonal to a decagon central plane. Unlike the great circles of the unit-radius 600-cell that pass through its vertices, this 30-gon is not actually a great circle of the unit-radius 3-sphere. Because it passes through face centers rather than vertices, it has a shorter radius and lies on a smaller 3-sphere. Of course, there is also a unit-radius great circle in this central plane completely orthogonal to a decagon central plane, but as a great circle polygon it is a 0-gon, not a 30-gon, because it intersects none of the points of the 600-cell. In the 600-cell, the great circle polygon completely orthogonal to each great decagon is a 0-gon.
- ^ a b The 30 vertices and 30 edges of the 30-cell ring lie on a skew {30/11} star polygon with a winding number of 11 called a triacontagram11, a continuous tight corkscrew helix bent into a loop of 30 edges (the magenta edges in the triple helix illustration), which winds 11 times around itself in the course of a single revolution around the 600-cell, accompanied by a single 360 degree twist of the 30-cell ring.[34] The same 30-cell ring can also be characterized as the Petrie polygon of the 600-cell.[cf]
- ^ a b c d e f Each great decagon central plane is completely orthogonal to a great 30-gon[ak] central plane which does not intersect any vertices of the 600-cell. The 72 30-gons are each the center axis of a 30-cell Boerdijk–Coxeter triple helix ring,[ad] with each segment of the 30-gon passing through a tetrahedron similarly. The 30-gon great circle resides completely in the curved 3-dimensional surface of its 3-sphere;[al] its curved segments are not chords. It does not touch any edges or vertices, but it does hit faces. It is the central axis of a spiral skew 30-gram, the Petrie polygon of the 600-cell which links all 30 vertices of the 30-cell Boerdijk–Coxeter helix, with three of its edges in each cell.[am]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n A point under isoclinic rotation traverses the diagonal[cr] straight line of a single isoclinic geodesic, reaching its destination directly, instead of the bent line of two successive simple geodesics. A geodesic is the shortest path through a space (intuitively, a string pulled taught between two points). Simple geodesics are great circles lying in a central plane (the only kind of geodesics that occur in 3-space on the 2-sphere). Isoclinic geodesics are different: they do not lie in a single plane; they are 4-dimensional spirals rather than simple 2-dimensional circles.[bf] But they are not like 3-dimensional screw threads either, because they form a closed loop like any circle.[cs] Isoclinic geodesics are 4-dimensional great circles, and they are just as circular as 2-dimensional circles: in fact, twice as circular, because they curve in a circle in two completely orthogonal directions at once.[ch] They are true circles,[cn] and even form fibrations like ordinary 2-dimensional great circles. These isoclines are geodesic 1-dimensional lines embedded in a 4-dimensional space. On the 3-sphere[ct] they always occur in chiral pairs as Villarceau circles on the Clifford torus,[cw] the geodesic paths traversed by vertices in an isoclinic rotation. They are helices bent into a Möbius loop in the fourth dimension, taking a diagonal winding route around the 3-sphere through the non-adjacent vertices of a 4-polytope's skew Clifford polygon.[cv]
- ^ a b c d e In 4-space no more than 4 great circles may be Clifford parallel[af] and all the same angular distance apart.[30] Such central planes are mutually isoclinic: each pair of planes is separated by two equal angles, and an isoclinic rotation by that angle will bring them together. Where three or four such planes are all separated by the same angle, they are called equi-isoclinic.
- ^ a b c The decagonal planes in the 600-cell occur in equi-isoclinic[ap] groups of 3, everywhere that 3 Clifford parallel decagons 36° (𝝅/5) apart form a 30-cell Boerdijk–Coxeter triple helix ring.[ad] Also Clifford parallel to those 3 decagons are 3 equi-isoclinic decagons 72° (2𝝅/5) apart, 3 108° (3𝝅/5) apart, and 3 144° (4𝝅/5) apart, for a total of 12 Clifford parallel decagons (120 vertices) that comprise a discrete Hopf fibration. Because the great decagons lie in isoclinic planes separated by two equal angles, their corresponding vertices are separated by a combined vector relative to both angles. Vectors in 4-space may be combined by quaternionic multiplication, discovered by Hamilton.[31] The corresponding vertices of two great polygons which are 36° (𝝅/5) apart by isoclinic rotation are 60° (𝝅/3) apart in 4-space. The corresponding vertices of two great polygons which are 108° (3𝝅/5) apart by isoclinic rotation are also 60° (𝝅/3) apart in 4-space. The corresponding vertices of two great polygons which are 72° (2𝝅/5) apart by isoclinic rotation are 120° (2𝝅/3) apart in 4-space, and the corresponding vertices of two great polygons which are 144° (4𝝅/5) apart by isoclinic rotation are also 120° (2𝝅/3) apart in 4-space.
- ^ a b c The hexagonal planes in the 600-cell occur in equi-isoclinic[ap] groups of 4, everywhere that 4 Clifford parallel hexagons 60° (𝝅/3) apart form a 24-cell. Also Clifford parallel to those 4 hexagons are 4 equi-isoclinic hexagons 36° (𝝅/5) apart, 4 72° (2𝝅/5) apart, 4 108° (3𝝅/5) apart, and 4 144° (4𝝅/5) apart, for a total of 20 Clifford parallel hexagons (120 vertices) that comprise a discrete Hopf fibration.
- ^ a b c The square planes in the 600-cell occur in equi-isoclinic[ap] groups of 2, everywhere that 2 Clifford parallel squares 90° (𝝅/2) apart form a 16-cell. Also Clifford parallel to those 2 squares are 4 equi-isoclinic groups of 4, where 3 Clifford parallel 16-cells 60° (𝝅/3) apart form a 24-cell. Also Clifford parallel are 4 equi-isoclinic groups of 3: 3 36° (𝝅/5) apart, 3 72° (2𝝅/5) apart, 3 108° (3𝝅/5) apart, and 3 144° (4𝝅/5) apart, for a total of 30 Clifford parallel squares (120 vertices) that comprise a discrete Hopf fibration.
- ^ a b c d e Two angles are required to fix the relative positions of two planes in 4-space.[29] Since all planes in the same hyperplane are 0 degrees apart in one of the two angles, only one angle is required in 3-space. Great decagons are a multiple (from 0 to 4) of 36° (𝝅/5) apart in each angle, and may be the same angle apart in both angles.[aq] Great hexagons may be 60° (𝝅/3) apart in one or both angles, and may be a multiple (from 0 to 4) of 36° (𝝅/5) apart in one or both angles.[ar] Great squares may be 90° (𝝅/2) apart in one or both angles, may be 60° (𝝅/3) apart in one or both angles, and may be a multiple (from 0 to 4) of 36° (𝝅/5) apart in one or both angles.[as] Planes which are separated by two equal angles are called isoclinic.[ap] Planes which are isoclinic have Clifford parallel great circles.[af] A great hexagon and a great decagon may be isoclinic, but more often they are separated by a 𝝅/3 (60°) angle and a multiple (from 1 to 4) of 𝝅/5 (36°) angle.
- ^ a b c d In the 24-cell each great square plane is completely orthogonal to another great square plane, and each great hexagon plane is completely orthogonal to a plane which intersects only two antipodal vertices: a great digon plane.
- ^ a b c d e Each Hopf fibration of the 3-sphere into Clifford parallel great circle fibers has a map (called its base) which is an ordinary 2-sphere.[42] On this map each great circle fiber appears as a single point. The base of a great decagon fibration of the 600-cell is the icosahedron, in which each vertex represents one of the 12 great decagons.[24] To a toplogist the base is not necessarily any part of the thing it maps: the base icosahedron is not expected to be a cell or interior feature of the 600-cell, it is merely the dimensionally analogous sphere,[bc] useful for reasoning about the fibration. But in fact the 600-cell does have icosahedra in it: 120 icosahedral vertex figures,[p] any of which can be seen as its base: a 3-dimensional 1:10 scale model of the whole 4-dimensional 600-cell. Each 3-dimensional vertex icosahedron is lifted to the 4-dimensional 600-cell by a 720 degree isoclinic rotation,[ao] which takes each of its 4 disjoint triangular faces in a circuit around one of 4 disjoint 30-vertex rings of 30 tetrahedral cells (each braided of 3 Clifford parallel great decagons), and so visits all 120 vertices of the 600-cell. Since the 12 decagonal great circles (of the 4 rings) are Clifford parallel decagons of the same fibration, we can see geometrically how the icosahedron works as a map of a Hopf fibration of the entire 600-cell, and how the Hopf fibration is an expression of an isoclinic symmetry.[43]
- ^ a b The regular skew 30-gon is the Petrie polygon of the 600-cell and its dual the 120-cell. The Petrie polygons of the 120-cell occur in the 600-cell as duals of the 30-cell Boerdijk–Coxeter helix rings: connecting their 30 cell centers together produces the Petrie polygons of the dual 120-cell, as noticed by Rolfdieter Frank (circa 2001). Thus he discovered that the vertex set of the 120-cell partitions into 20 non-intersecting Petrie polygons. This set of 20 disjoint Clifford parallel skew polygons is a discrete Hopf fibration of the 120-cell (just as their 20 dual 30-cell rings are a discrete fibration of the 600-cell).
- ^ a b c These are the √2 tetrahedral cells of the 75 inscribed 16-cells, not the √0.𝚫 tetrahedral cells of the 600-cell.
- ^ a b ‟The Petrie polygons of the Platonic solid correspond to equatorial polygons of the truncation and to equators of the simplicially subdivided spherical tessellation . This "simplicial subdivision" is the arrangement of right-angled spherical triangles into which the sphere is decomposed by the planes of symmetry of the solid. The great circles that lie in these planes were formerly called "lines of symmetry", but perhaps a more vivid name is reflecting circles. The analogous simplicial subdivision of the spherical honeycomb consists of the tetrahedra 0123 into which a hypersphere (in Euclidean 4-space) is decomposed by the hyperplanes of symmetry of the polytope . The great spheres which lie in these hyperplanes are naturally called reflecting spheres. Since the orthoscheme has no obtuse angles, it entirely contains the arc that measures the absolutely shortest distance 𝝅/h [between the] 2h tetrahedra [that] are strung like beads on a necklace, or like a "rotating ring of tetrahedra" ... whose opposite edges are generators of a helicoid. The two opposite edges of each tetrahedron are related by a screw-displacement.[bo] Hence the total number of spheres is 2h.”[66]
- ^ a b c The fibration's Clifford parallel cell rings may or may not be chiral objects, depending upon whether the 4-polytope's cells have opposing faces or not. The characteristic cell rings of the 16-cell and 600-cell (with tetrahedral cells) are chiral: they twist either clockwise or counterclockwise. Isoclines acting with either left or right chirality (not both) run through cell rings of this kind, though each fibration contains both left and right cell rings.[dk] The characteristic cell rings of the tesseract, 24-cell and 120-cell (with cubical, octahedral, and dodecahedral cells respectively) are directly congruent, not chiral: there is only one kind of characteristic cell ring in each of these 4-polytopes, and it is not twisted (it has no torsion). Pairs of left-handed and right-handed isoclines run through cell rings of this kind. Note that all these 4-polytopes (except the 16-cell) contain fibrations of their inscribed predecessors' characteristic cell rings in addition to their own characteristic fibrations, so the 600-cell contains both chiral and directly congruent cell rings.
- ^ a b The choice of a partitioning of a regular 4-polytope into cell rings is arbitrary, because all of its cells are identical. No particular fibration is distinguished, unless the 4-polytope is rotating. In isoclinic rotations, one set of cell rings (one fibration) is distinguished as the unique container of that distinct left-right pair of rotations and its isoclines.
- ^ a b The only way to partition the 120 vertices of the 600-cell into 4 completely disjoint 30-vertex, 30-cell rings[ad] is by partitioning each of 15 completely disjoint 16-cells similarly into 4 symmetric parts: 4 antipodal vertex pairs lying on the 4 orthogonal axes of the 16-cell. The 600-cell contains 75 distinct 16-cells which can be partitioned into sets of 15 completely disjoint 16-cells. In any set of 4 completely disjoint 30-cell rings, there is a set of 15 completely disjoint 16-cells, with one axis of each 16-cell in each 30-cell ring.
- ^ a b c d e f One might ask whether dimensional analogy "always works", or if it is perhaps "just guesswork" that might sometimes be incapable of producing a correct dimensionally analogous figure, especially when reasoning from a lower to a higher dimension. Apparently dimensional analogy in both directions has firm mathematical foundations. Dechant[41] derived the 4D symmetry groups from their 3D symmetry group counterparts by induction, demonstrating that there is nothing in 4D symmetry that is not already inherent in 3D symmetry. He showed that neither 4D symmetry nor 3D symmetry is more fundamental than the other, as either can be derived from the other. This is true whether dimensional analogies are computed using Coxeter group theory, or Clifford geometric algebra. These two rather different kinds of mathematics contribute complementary geometric insights. Another profound example of dimensional analogy mathematics is the Hopf fibration, a mapping between points on the 2-sphere and disjoint (Clifford parallel) great circles on the 3-sphere.
- ^ Unlike their bounding decagons, the 20 cell rings themselves are not all Clifford parallel to each other, because only completely disjoint polytopes are Clifford parallel.[g] The 20 cell rings have 5 different subsets of 4 Clifford parallel cell rings. Each cell ring is bounded by 3 Clifford parallel great decagons, so each subset of 4 Clifford parallel cell rings is bounded by a total of 12 Clifford parallel great decagons (a discrete Hopf fibration). In fact each of the 5 different subsets of 4 cell rings is bounded by the same 12 Clifford parallel great decagons (the same Hopf fibration); there are 5 different ways to see the same 12 decagons as a set of 4 cell rings (and equivalently, just one way to see them as a single set of 20 cell rings).
- ^ Note that the differently colored helices of cells are different cell rings (or ring-shaped holes) in the same fibration, not the different fibrations of the 4-polytope. Each fibration is the entire 4-polytope.
- ^ a b c d e In a double rotation each vertex can be said to move along two completely orthogonal great circles at the same time, but it does not stay within the central plane of either of those original great circles; rather, it moves along a helical geodesic that traverses diagonally between great circles. The two completely orthogonal planes of rotation are said to be invariant because the points in each stay in their places in the plane as the plane moves, rotating and tilting sideways by the angle that the other plane rotates.
- ^ a b c The poles of the invariant axis of a rotating 2-sphere are dimensionally analogous to the pair of invariant planes of a rotating 3-sphere. The poles of the rotating 2-sphere are dimensionally analogous to linked great circles on the 3-sphere. By dimensional analogy, each 1D point in 3D lifts to a 2D line in 4D, in this case a circle.[av] The two antipodal rotation poles lift to a pair of circular Hopf fibers which are not merely Clifford parallel and interlinked,[af] but also completely orthogonal. The invariant great circles of the 4D rotation are its poles. In the case of an isoclinic rotation, there is not merely one such pair of 2D poles (completely orthogonal Hopf great circle fibers), there are many such pairs: a finite number of circle-pairs if the 3-sphere fibration is discrete (e.g. a regular polytope with a finite number of vertices), or else an infinite number of orthogonal circle-pairs, entirely filling the 3-sphere. Every point in the curved 3-space of the 3-sphere lies on one such circle (never on two, since the completely orthogonal circles, like all the Clifford parallel Hopf great circle fibers, do not intersect). Where a 2D rotation has one pole, and a 3D rotation of a 2-sphere has 2 poles, an isoclinic 4D rotation of a 3-sphere has nothing but poles, an infinite number of them. In a discrete 4-polytope, all the Clifford parallel invariant great polygons of the rotation are poles, and they fill the 4-polytope, passing through every vertex just once. In one full revolution of such a rotation, every point in the space loops exactly once through its pole-circle. The circles are arranged with a surprising symmetry, so that each pole-circle links with every other pole-circle, like a maximally dense fabric of 4D chain mail in which all the circles are linked through each other, but no two circles ever intersect.
- ^ The 4 red faces of the snub tetrahedron correspond to the 4 completely disjoint cell rings of the sparse construction of the fibration (its subfibration). The red faces are centered on the vertices of an inscribed tetrahedron, and lie in the center of the larger faces of an inscribing tetrahedron.
- ^ a b Because the octahedron can be snub truncated yielding an icosahedron,[48] another name for the icosahedron is snub octahedron. This term refers specifically to a lower symmetry arrangement of the icosahedron's faces (with 8 faces of one color and 12 of another).
- ^ a b c The 120-point 600-cell has 120 overlapping icosahedral pyramids.[p]
- ^ The icosahedron is not radially equilateral in Euclidean 3-space, but an icosahedral pyramid is radially equilateral in the curved 3-space of the 600-cell's surface (the 3-sphere). In 4-space the 12 edges radiating from its apex are not actually its radii: the apex of the icosahedral pyramid is not actually its center, just one of its vertices. But in curved 3-space the edges radiating symmetrically from the apex are radii, so the icosahedron is radially equilateral in that curved 3-space. In Euclidean 4-space 24 edges radiating symmetrically from a central point make the radially equilateral 24-cell, and a symmetrical subset of 16 of those edges make the radially equilateral tesseract.
- ^ An icosahedron edge between two blue faces is surrounded by two blue-faced icosahedral pyramid cells and 3 cells from an adjacent cluster of 5 cells (one of which is the central tetrahedron of the five)
- ^ The pentagonal pyramids around each vertex of the "snub octahedron" icosahedron all look the same, with two yellow and three blue faces. Each pentagon has five distinct rotational orientations. Rotating any pentagonal pyramid rotates all of them, so the five rotational positions are the only five different ways to arrange the colors.
- ^ Notice that the contraction is chiral, since there are two choices of diagonal on which to begin folding the square faces.
- ^ a b c Let Q denote a rotation, R a reflection, T a translation, and let Qq Rr T denote a product of several such transformations, all commutative with one another. Then RT is a glide-reflection (in two or three dimensions), QR is a rotary-reflection, QT is a screw-displacement, and Q2 is a double rotation (in four dimensions). Every orthogonal transformation is expressible as
Qq Rr
where 2q + r ≤ n, the number of dimensions. Transformations involving a translation are expressible as
Qq Rr T
where 2q + r + 1 ≤ n.
For n = 4 in particular, every displacement is either a double rotation Q2, or a screw-displacement QT (where the rotation component Q is a simple rotation). Every enantiomorphous transformation in 4-space (reversing chirality) is a QRT.[69] - ^ These transformations are not among the orthogonal transformations of the Coxeter groups generated by reflections.[bo] They are transformations of the pyritohedral 3D symmetry group, the unique polyhedral point group that is neither a rotation group nor a reflection group.[53]
- ^ There is a vertex icosahedron[p] inside each 24-cell octahedral central section (not inside a √1 octahedral cell, but in the larger √2 octahedron that lies in a central hyperplane), and a larger icosahedron inside each 24-cell cuboctahedron. The two different-sized icosahedra are the second and fourth sections of the 600-cell (beginning with a vertex). The octahedron and the cuboctahedron are the central sections of the 24-cell (beginning with a vertex and beginning with a cell, respectively).[50] The cuboctahedron, large icosahedron, octahedron, and small icosahedron nest like Russian dolls and are related by a helical contraction.[51] The contraction begins with the square faces of the cuboctahedron folding inward along their diagonals to form pairs of triangles.[bn] The 12 vertices of the cuboctahedron move toward each other to the points where they form a regular icosahedron (the large icosahedron); they move slightly closer together until they form a Jessen's icosahedron; they continue to spiral toward each other until they merge into the 8 vertices of the octahedron;[52] and they continue moving along the same helical paths, separating again into the 12 vertices of the snub octahedron (the small icosahedron).[bi] The geometry of this sequence of transformations[bp] in S3 is similar to the kinematics of the cuboctahedron and the tensegrity icosahedron in R3. The twisting, expansive-contractive transformations between these polyhedra were named Jitterbug transformations by Buckminster Fuller.[54]
- ^ These 12 cells are edge-bonded to the central cell, face-bonded to the exterior faces of the cluster of 5, and face-bonded to each other in pairs. They are blue-faced cells in the 6 different icosahedral pyramids surrounding the cluster of 5.
- ^ The √1 tetrahedron has a volume of 9 √0.𝚫 tetrahedral cells. In the curved 3-dimensional volume of the 600 cells, it encloses the cluster of 5 cells, which do not entirely fill it. The 6 dipyramids (12 cells) which fit into the concavities of the cluster of 5 cells overfill it: only one third of each dipyramid lies within the √1 tetrahedron. The dipyramids contribute one-third of each of 12 cells to it, a volume equivalent to 4 cells.
- ^ The 600-cell also contains 600 octahedra. The first section of the 600-cell beginning with a cell is tetrahedral, and the third section is octahedral. These internal octahedra are not cells of the 600-cell because they are not volumetrically disjoint, but they are each a cell of one of the 25 internal 24-cells. The 600-cell also contains 600 cubes, each a cell of one of its 75 internal 8-cell tesseracts.[ah]
- ^ Each √1 edge of the octahedral cell is the long diameter of another tetrahedral dipyramid (two more face-bonded tetrahedral cells). In the 24-cell, three octahedral cells surround each edge, so one third of the dipyramid lies inside each octahedron, split between two adjacent concave faces. Each concave face is filled by one-sixth of each of the three dipyramids that surround its three edges, so it has the same volume as one tetrahedral cell.
- ^ A √1 octahedral cell (of any 24-cell inscribed in the 600-cell) has six vertices which all lie in the same hyperplane: they bound an octahedral section (a flat three-dimensional slice) of the 600-cell. The same √1 octahedron filled by 25 tetrahedral cells has a total of 14 vertices lying in three parallel three-dimensional sections of the 600-cell: the 6-point √1 octahedral section, a 4-point √1 tetrahedral section, and a 4-point √0.𝚫 tetrahedral section. In the curved three-dimensional space of the 600-cell's surface, the √1 octahedron surrounds the √1 tetrahedron which surrounds the √0.𝚫 tetrahedron, as three concentric hulls. This 14-vertex 4-polytope is a 4-pyramid with a regular octahedron base: not a canonical octahedral pyramid with one apex (which has only 7 vertices) but an irregular truncated octahedral pyramid. Because its base is a regular octahedron which is a 24-cell octahedral cell, this 4-pyramid lies on the surface of the 24-cell.
- ^ The apex of a canonical √1 octahedral pyramid has been truncated into a regular tetrahedral cell with shorter √0.𝚫 edges, replacing the apex with four vertices. The truncation has also created another four vertices (arranged as a √1 tetrahedron in a hyperplane between the octahedral base and the apex tetrahedral cell), and linked these eight new vertices with √0.𝚫 edges. The truncated pyramid thus has eight 'apex' vertices above the hyperplane of its octahedral base, rather than just one apex: 14 vertices in all. The original pyramid had flat sides: the five geodesic routes from any base vertex to the opposite base vertex ran along two √1 edges (and just one of those routes ran through the single apex). The truncated pyramid has rounded sides: five geodesic routes from any base vertex to the opposite base vertex run along three √0.𝚫 edges (and pass through two 'apexes').
- ^ The uniform 4-polytopes which this 14-vertex, 25-cell irregular 4-polytope most closely resembles may be the 10-vertex, 10-cell rectified 5-cell and its dual (it has characteristics of both).
- ^ a b How can a bumpy "egg crate" square of 100 tetrahedra lie on the smooth surface of the Clifford torus?[cd] But how can a flat 10x10 square represent the 120-vertex 600-cell (where are the other 20 vertices)? In the isoclinic rotation of the 600-cell in great decagon invariant planes, the Clifford torus is a smooth Euclidean 2-surface which intersects the mid-edges of exactly 100 tetrahedral cells. Edges are what tetrahedra have 6 of. The mid-edges are not vertices of the 600-cell, but they are all 600 vertices of its equal-radius dual polytope, the 120-cell. The 120-cell has 5 disjoint 600-cells inscribed in it, two different ways. This distinct smooth Clifford torus (this rotation) is a discrete fibration of the 120-cell in 60 decagon invariant planes, and a discrete fibration of the 600-cell in 12 decagon invariant planes.
- ^ a b The annular ring gaps between icosahedra are filled by a ring of 10 face-bonded tetrahedra that all meet at the vertex where the two icosahedra meet. This 10-cell ring is shaped like a pentagonal antiprism which has been hollowed out like a bowl on both its top and bottom sides, so that it has zero thickness at its center. This center vertex, like all the other vertices of the 600-cell, is itself the apex of an icosahedral pyramid where 20 tetrahedra meet.[bj] Therefore the annular ring of 10 tetrahedra is itself an equatorial ring of an icosahedral pyramid, containing 10 of the 20 cells of its icosahedral pyramid.
- ^ The 100-face surface of the triangular-faced 150-cell column could be scissors-cut lengthwise along a 10 edge path and peeled and laid flat as a 10×10 parallelogram of triangles.
- ^ Because the 100-face surface of the 150-cell torus is alternately convex and concave, 100 tetrahedra stack on it in face-bonded pairs, as 50 triangular bipyramids which share one raised vertex and bury one formerly exposed valley edge. The triangular bipyramids are vertex-bonded to each other in 5 parallel lines of 5 bipyramids (10 tetrahedra) each, which run straight up and down the outside surface of the 150-cell column.
- ^ 5 decagons spiral clockwise and 5 spiral counterclockwise, intersecting each other at the 50 valley vertices.
- ^ a b A Clifford torus is the Hopf fiber bundle of a distinct isoclinic rotation of a rigid 3-sphere, involving all of its points. The torus embedded in 4-space, like the double rotation, is the Cartesian product of two completely orthogonal great circles. It is a filled doughnut not a ring doughnut; there is no hole in the 3-sphere except the 4-ball it encloses. A regular 4-polytope has a distinct number of characteristic Clifford tori, because it has a distinct number of characteristic rotational symmetries. Each forms a discrete fibration that reaches all the discrete points once each, in an isoclinic rotation with a distinct set of pairs of completely orthogonal invariant planes.
- ^ The same 10-face belt of an icosahedral pyramid is an annular ring of 10 tetrahedra around the apex.[bz]
- ^ a b c The 600-cell's Petrie polygon is a skew triacontagon {30}. It can be seen in orthogonal projection as the circumference of a triacontagram {30/3}=3{10} helix which zig-zags 60° left and right, bridging the space between the 3 Clifford parallel great decagons of the 30-cell ring. In the completely orthogonal plane it projects to the regular triacontagram {30/11}.[62]
- ^ a b The 30 vertices of the Boerdijk–Coxeter triple-helix ring lie in 3 decagonal central planes which intersect only at one point (the center of the 600-cell), even though they are not completely orthogonal or orthogonal at all: they are π/5 apart.[at] Their decagonal great circles are Clifford parallel: one 600-cell edge-length apart at every point.[af] They are ordinary 2-dimensional great circles, not helices, but they are linked Clifford parallel circles.
- ^ a b c Isoclinic geodesics are 4-dimensional great circles in the sense that they are 1-dimensional geodesic lines that curve in 4-space in two completely orthogonal planes at once. They should not be confused with great 2-spheres,[73] which are the 4-space analogues[bc] of 2-dimensional great circles in 3-space (great 1-spheres).
- ^ The 20 30-cell rings are chiral objects; they either spiral clockwise (right) or counterclockwise (left). The 150-cell torus (formed by five cell-disjoint 30-cell rings of the same chirality surrounding a great decagon) is not itself a chiral object, since it can be decomposed into either five parallel left-handed rings or five parallel right-handed rings. Unlike the 20-cell rings, the 150-cell tori are directly congruent with no torsion, like the octahedral 6-cell rings of the 24-cell. Each great decagon has five left-handed 30-cell rings surrounding it, and also five right-handed 30-cell rings surrounding it; but left-handed and right-handed 30-cell rings are not cell-disjoint and belong to different distinct rotations: the left and right rotations of the same fibration. In either distinct isoclinic rotation (left or right), the vertices of the 600-cell move along the axial 15-gram isoclines of 20 left 30-cell rings or 20 right 30-cell rings. Thus the great decagons, the 30-cell rings, and the 150-cell tori all occur as sets of Clifford parallel interlinked circles,[af] although the exact way they nest together, avoid intersecting each other, and pass through each other to form a Hopf link is not identical for these three different kinds of Clifford parallel polytopes, in part because the linked pairs are variously of no inherent chirality (the decagons), the same chirality (the 30-cell rings), or no net torsion and both left and right interior organization (the 150-cell tori) but tracing the same chirality of interior organization in any distinct left or right rotation.
- ^ A point on the icosahedron Hopf map[av] of the 600-cell's decagonal fibration lifts to a great decagon; a triangular face lifts to a 30-cell ring; and a pentagonal pyramid of 5 faces lifts to a 150-cell torus.[58] In the grand antiprism decomposition, two completely disjoint 150-cell tori are lifted from antipodal pentagons, leaving an equatorial ring of 10 icosahedron faces between them: a Petrie decagon of 10 triangles, which lift to 10 30-cell rings. The two completely disjoint 150-cell tori contain 12 disjoint (Clifford parallel) decagons and all 120 vertices, so they comprise a complete Hopf fibration; there is no room for more 150-cell tori of this kind. To get a decomposition of the 600-cell into four 150-cell tori of this kind, the icosahedral map would have to be decomposed into four pentagons, centered at the vertices of an inscribed tetrahedron, and the icosahedron cannot be decomposed that way.
- ^ a b (Coxeter 1973) uses the greek letter 𝝓 (phi) to represent one of the three characteristic angles 𝟀, 𝝓, 𝟁 of a regular polytope. Because 𝝓 is commonly used to represent the golden ratio constant ≈ 1.618, for which Coxeter uses 𝝉 (tau), we reverse Coxeter's conventions, and use 𝝉 to represent the characteristic angle.
- ^ The four edges of each 4-orthoscheme which meet at the center of a regular 4-polytope are of unequal length, because they are the four characteristic radii of the regular 4-polytope: a vertex radius, an edge center radius, a face center radius, and a cell center radius. The five vertices of the 4-orthoscheme always include one regular 4-polytope vertex, one regular 4-polytope edge center, one regular 4-polytope face center, one regular 4-polytope cell center, and the regular 4-polytope center. Those five vertices (in that order) comprise a path along four mutually perpendicular edges (that makes three right angle turns), the characteristic feature of a 4-orthoscheme. The 4-orthoscheme has five dissimilar 3-orthoscheme facets.
- ^ The reflecting surface of a (3-dimensional) polyhedron consists of 2-dimensional faces; the reflecting surface of a (4-dimensional) polychoron consists of 3-dimensional cells.
- ^ a b c d e f g An isoclinic rotation by 36° is two simple rotations by 36° at the same time.[dw] It moves all the vertices 60° at the same time, in various different directions. Fifteen successive diagonal rotational increments, of 36°×36° each, move each vertex 900° through 15 vertices on a Möbius double loop of circumference 5𝝅 called an isocline, winding around the 600-cell and back to its point of origin, in one-and-one-half the time (15 rotational increments) that it would take a simple rotation to take the vertex once around the 600-cell on an ordinary {10} great circle (in 10 rotational increments).[cs] The helical double loop 5𝝅 isocline is just a special kind of single full circle, of 1.5 the period (15 chords instead of 10) as the simple great circle. The isocline is one true circle, as perfectly round and geodesic as the simple great circle, even through its chords are φ longer, its circumference is 5𝝅 instead of 2𝝅, it circles through four dimensions instead of two, and it acts in two chiral forms (left and right) even though all such circles of the same circumference are directly congruent. Nevertheless, to avoid confusion we always refer to it as an isocline and reserve the term great circle for an ordinary great circle in the plane.[ao]
- ^ a b The 600-cell has 7200 distinct rotational displacements, each with its invariant rotation plane. The 7200 distinct central planes can be grouped into sets of Clifford parallel invariant rotation planes of 25 distinct isoclinic rotations, and are usually given as those sets.[75]
- ^ a b c d e Any double rotation (including an isoclinic rotation) can be seen as the composition of two simple rotations a and b: the left double rotation as a then b, and the right double rotation as b then a. Simple rotations are not commutative; left and right rotations (in general) reach different destinations. The difference between a double rotation and its two composing simple rotations is that the double rotation is 4-dimensionally diagonal: each moving vertex reaches its destination directly without passing through the intermediate point touched by a then b, or the other intermediate point touched by b then a, by rotating on a single helical geodesic (so it is the shortest path).[bf] Conversely, any simple rotation can be seen as the composition of two equal-angled double rotations (a left isoclinic rotation and a right isoclinic rotation), as discovered by Cayley; perhaps surprisingly, this composition is commutative, and is possible for any double rotation as well.[72]
- ^ a b Isoclinic rotations take each vertex to a non-adjacent vertex at least two edge-lengths away. In the characteristic isoclinic rotations of the 5-cell, 16-cell, 24-cell and 600-cell, the non-adjacent vertex is exactly two edge-lengths away along one of several great circle geodesic routes: the opposite vertex of a neighboring cell. In the 8-cell it is three zig-zag edge-lengths away in the same cell: the opposite vertex of a cube. In the 120-cell it is four zig-zag edges away in the same cell: the opposite vertex of a dodecahedron.
- ^ a b c In an isoclinic rotation, each point anywhere in the 4-polytope moves an equal distance in four orthogonal directions at once, on a 4-dimensional diagonal.[ao] The point is displaced a total Pythagorean distance equal to the square root of four times the square of that distance. All vertices are displaced to a vertex at least two edge-lengths away.[cq] For example, when the unit-radius 600-cell rotates isoclinically 36 degrees in a decagon invariant plane and 36 degrees in its completely orthogonal invariant plane,[an] each vertex is displaced to another vertex √1 (60°) distant, moving √1/4 = 1/2 unit radius in four orthogonal directions.
- ^ a b c Because the 600-cell's helical pentadecagram2 geodesic is bent into a twisted ring in the fourth dimension like a Möbius strip, its screw thread doubles back across itself after each revolution, without ever reversing its direction of rotation (left or right). The 30-vertex isoclinic path follows a Möbius double loop, forming a single continuous 15-vertex loop traversed in two revolutions. The Möbius helix is a geodesic "straight line" or isocline. The isocline connects the vertices of a lower frequency (longer wavelength) skew polygram than the Petrie polygon. The Petrie triacontagon has √0.𝚫 edges; the isoclinic pentadecagram2 has √1 edges which join vertices which are two √0.𝚫 edges apart. Each √1 edge belongs to a different great hexagon, and successive √1 edges belong to different 24-cells, as the isoclinic rotation takes hexagons to Clifford parallel hexagons and passes through successive Clifford parallel 24-cells.
- ^ a b All isoclines are geodesics, and isoclines on the 3-sphere are circles (curving equally in each dimension), but not all isoclines on 3-manifolds in 4-space are circles.
- ^ a b c d Isoclinic rotations[ao] partition the 600 cells (and the 120 vertices) of the 600-cell into two disjoint subsets of 300 cells (and 60 vertices), even and odd (or black and white), which shift places among themselves on black or white isoclines, in a manner dimensionally analogous[bc] to the way the bishops' diagonal moves restrict them to the white or the black squares of the chessboard.[du] The black and white subsets are also divided among black and white invariant great circle polygons of the isoclinic rotation. In a discrete rotation (as of a 4-polytope with a finite number of vertices) the black and white subsets correspond to sets of inscribed great polygons {p} in invariant great circle polygons {2p}. For example, in the 600-cell a black and a white great pentagon {5} are inscribed in an invariant great decagon {10} of the characteristic decagonal isoclinic rotation. Importantly, a black and white pair of polygons {p} of the same distinct isoclinic rotation are never inscribed in the same {2p} polygon; there is always a black and a white {p} polygon inscribed in each invariant {2p} polygon, but they belong to distinct isoclinic rotations: the left and right rotation of the same fibraton, which share the same set of invariant planes. Black (white) isoclines intersect only black (white) great {p} polygons, so each vertex is either black or white.
- ^ a b c d e The chord-path of an isocline may be called the 4-polytope's Clifford polygon, as it is the skew polygonal shape of the rotational circles traversed by the 4-polytope's vertices in its characteristic Clifford displacement.[86] The isocline is a helical Möbius double loop which reverses its chirality twice in the course of a full double circuit. The double loop is entirely contained within a single cell ring, where it follows chords connecting even (odd) vertices: typically opposite vertices of adjacent cells, two edge lengths apart.[cu] Both "halves" of the double loop pass through each cell in the cell ring, but intersect only two even (odd) vertices in each even (odd) cell. Each pair of intersected vertices in an even (odd) cell lie opposite each other on the Möbius strip, exactly one edge length apart. Thus each cell has two helices passing through it, which are Clifford parallels[af] of opposite chirality at each pair of parallel points. Globally these two helices are a single connected circle of both chiralities,[cn] with no net torsion. An isocline acts as a left (or right) isocline when traversed by a left (or right) rotation (of different fibrations).
- ^ a b Isoclines on the 3-sphere occur in non-intersecting pairs of even/odd coordinate parity.[cu] A single black or white isocline forms a Möbius loop called the {1,1} torus knot or Villarceau circle[74] in which each of two "circles" linked in a Möbius "figure eight" loop traverses through all four dimensions.[cv] The double loop is a true circle in four dimensions.[cn] Even and odd isoclines are also linked, not in a Möbius loop but as a Hopf link of two non-intersecting circles,[af] as are all the Clifford parallel isoclines of a Hopf fiber bundle.
- ^ a b A rotation in 4-space is completely characterized by choosing an invariant plane and an angle and direction (left or right) through which it rotates, and another angle and direction through which its one completely orthogonal invariant plane rotates. Two rotational displacements are identical if they have the same pair of invariant planes of rotation, through the same angles in the same directions (and hence also the same chiral pairing of directions). Thus the general rotation in 4-space is a double rotation, characterized by two angles. A simple rotation is a special case in which one rotational angle is 0.[cp] An isoclinic rotation is a different special case, similar but not identical to two simple rotations through the same angle.[ao]
- ^ a b c There is a single invariant plane in each simple rotation, and a completely orthogonal fixed plane. There are an infinite number of pairs of completely orthogonal invariant planes in each isoclinic rotation, all rotating through the same angle;[bg] nonetheless, not all central planes are invariant planes of rotation. The invariant planes of an isoclinic rotation constitute a fibration of the entire 4-polytope.[77] In every isoclinic rotation of the 600-cell taking vertices to vertices either 12 Clifford parallel great decagons, or 20 Clifford parallel great hexagons or 30 Clifford parallel great squares are invariant planes of rotation.
- ^ In an isoclinic rotation each invariant plane is Clifford parallel to the plane it moves to, and they do not intersect at any time (except at the central point). In a simple rotation the invariant plane intersects the plane it moves to in a line, and moves to it by rotating around that line.
- ^ In a Clifford displacement, also known as an isoclinic rotation, all the Clifford parallel[af] invariant planes[cy] are displaced in four orthogonal directions (two completely orthogonal planes) at once: they are rotated by the same angle, and at the same time they are tilted sideways by that same angle. A Clifford displacement is 4-dimensionally diagonal.[cr] Every plane that is Clifford parallel to one of the completely orthogonal planes is invariant under the isoclinic rotation: all the points in the plane rotate in circles but remain in the plane, even as the whole plane rotates sideways.[cz] All central polygons (of every kind) rotate by the same angle (though not all do so invariantly), and are also displaced sideways by the same angle to a Clifford parallel polygon (of the same kind).
- ^ The three 16-cells in the 24-cell are rotated by 60° (𝜋/3) isoclinically with respect to each other. Because an isoclinic rotation is a rotation in two completely orthogonal planes at the same time, this means their corresponding vertices are 120° (2𝜋/3) apart. In a unit-radius 4-polytope, vertices 120° apart are joined by a √3 chord.
- ^ a b c Any isoclinic rotation by 𝜋/5 in decagonal invariant planes[di] takes every central polygon, geodesic cell ring or inscribed 4-polytope[f] in the 600-cell to a Clifford parallel polytope 𝜋/5 away.
- ^ a b Five 24-cells meet at each vertex of the 600-cell,[i] so there are four different directions in which the vertices can move to rotate the 24-cell (or all the 24-cells at once in an isoclinic rotation[dc]) directly toward an adjacent 24-cell.
- ^ a b A disjoint 24-cell reached by an isoclinic rotation is not any of the four adjacent 24-cells; the double rotation[cx] takes it past (not through) the adjacent 24-cell it rotates toward,[dd] and left or right to a more distant 24-cell from which it is completely disjoint.[g] The four directions reach 8 different 24-cells[d] because in an isoclinic rotation each vertex moves in a spiral along two completely orthogonal great circles at once. Four paths are right-hand threaded (like most screws and bolts), moving along the circles in the "same" directions, and four are left-hand threaded (like a reverse-threaded bolt), moving along the circles in what we conventionally say are "opposite" directions (according to the right hand rule by which we conventionally say which way is "up" on each of the 4 coordinate axes).[78]
- ^ All isoclinic polygons are Clifford parallels (completely disjoint).[g] Polyhedra (3-polytopes) and polychora (4-polytopes) may be isoclinic and not disjoint, if all of their corresponding central polygons are either Clifford parallel, or cocellular (in the same hyperplane) or coincident (the same object, shared). For example, the 24-cell, 600-cell and 120-cell contain pairs of inscribed tesseracts (8-cells) which are isoclinically rotated by 𝜋/3 with respect to each other, yet are not disjoint: they share a 16-cell (8 vertices, 6 great squares and 4 octahedral central hyperplanes), and some corresponding pairs of their great squares are cocellular (intersecting) rather than Clifford parallel (disjoint).
- ^ a b c At each vertex, a 600-cell has four adjacent (non-disjoint)[g] 24-cells that can each be reached by a simple rotation in that direction.[dd] Each 24-cell has 4 great hexagons crossing at each of its vertices, one of which it shares with each of the adjacent 24-cells; in a simple rotation that hexagonal plane remains fixed (its vertices do not move) as the 600-cell rotates around the common hexagonal plane. The 24-cell has 16 great hexagons altogether, so it is adjacent (non-disjoint) to 16 other 24-cells.[d] In addition to being reachable by a simple rotation, each of the 16 can also be reached by an isoclinic rotation in which the shared hexagonal plane is not fixed: it rotates (non-invariantly) through 𝜋/5. The double rotation reaches an adjacent 24-cell directly as if indirectly by two successive simple rotations:[cp] first to one of the other adjacent 24-cells, and then to the destination 24-cell (adjacent to both of them).
- ^ a b In the 600-cell, there is a simple rotation which will take any vertex directly to any other vertex, also moving most or all of the other vertices but leaving at most 6 other vertices fixed (the vertices that the fixed central plane intersects). The vertex moves along a great circle in the invariant plane of rotation between adjacent vertices of a great decagon, a great hexagon, a great square or a great digon,[au] and the completely orthogonal fixed plane intersects 0 vertices (a 30-gon),[an] 2 vertices (a digon), 4 vertices (a square) or 6 vertices (a hexagon) respectively. Two non-disjoint 24-cells are related by a simple rotation through 𝜋/5 of the digon central plane completely orthogonal to their common hexagonal central plane. In this simple rotation, the hexagon does not move. The two non-disjoint 24-cells are also related by an isoclinic rotation in which the shared hexagonal plane does move.[dg]
- ^ Any isoclinic rotation in a decagonal invariant plane is an isoclinic rotation in 24 invariant planes: 12 Clifford parallel decagonal planes,[cy] and the 12 Clifford parallel 30-gon planes completely orthogonal to each of those decagonal planes.[an] As the invariant planes rotate in two completely orthogonal directions at once,[bf] all points in the planes move with them (stay in their planes and rotate with them), describing helical isoclines[ao] through 4-space. Note however that in a discrete decagonal fibration of the 600-cell (where 120 vertices are the only points considered), the 12 30-gon planes contain no points.
- ^ a b Notice the apparent incongruity of rotating hexagons by 𝜋/5, since only their opposite vertices are an integral multiple of 𝜋/5 apart. However, recall that 600-cell vertices which are one hexagon edge apart are exactly two decagon edges and two tetrahedral cells (one triangular dipyramid) apart. The hexagons have their own 10 discrete fibrations and cell rings, not Clifford parallel to the decagonal fibrations but also by fives[k] in that five 24-cells meet at each vertex, each pair sharing a hexagon.[i] Each hexagon rotates non-invariantly by 𝜋/5 in a hexagonal isoclinic rotation between non-disjoint 24-cells.[dg] Conversely, in all 𝜋/5 isoclinic rotations in decagonal invariant planes, all the vertices travel along isoclines[ao] which follow the edges of hexagons.
- ^ a b c d Each isocline has no inherent chirality but can act as either a left or right isocline; it is shared by a distinct left rotation and a distinct right rotation of different fibrations.
- ^ a b The analogous relationships among three kinds of {2p} isoclinic rotations, in Clifford parallel bundles of {4}, {6} or {10} great polygon invariant planes respectively, are at the heart of the complex nested relationship among the regular convex 4-polytopes.[a] In the √1 hexagon {6} rotations characteristic of the 24-cell, the isocline chords (polygram edges) are simply √3 chords of the great hexagon, so the simple {6} hexagon rotation and the isoclinic {6/2} hexagram rotation both rotate circles of 6 vertices. The hexagram isocline, a special kind of great circle, has a circumference of 4𝝅 compared to the hexagon 2𝝅 great circle.[dq] The invariant central plane completely orthogonal to each {6} great hexagon is a {2} great digon,[au] so an isoclinic {6} rotation of hexagrams is also a {2} rotation of axes.[dh] In the √2 square {4} rotations characteristic of the 16-cell, the isocline polygram is an octagram, and the isocline's chords are its √2 edges and its √4 diameters, so the isocline is a circle of circumference 4𝝅. In an isoclinic rotation, the eight vertices of the {8/3} octagram change places, each making one complete revolution through 720° as the isocline winds three times around the 3-sphere. The invariant central plane completely orthogonal to each {4} great square is another {4} great square √4 distant, so a right {4} rotation of squares is also a left {4} rotation of squares. The 16-cell's dual polytope the 8-cell tesseract inherits the same simple {4} and isoclinic {8/3} rotations, but its characteristic isoclinic rotation takes place in completely orthogonal invariant planes which contain a {4} great rectangle or a {2} great digon (from its successor the 24-cell). In the 8-cell this is a rotation of √1 × √3 great rectangles, and also a rotation of √4 axes, but it is the same isoclinic rotation as the 24-cell's characteristic rotation of {6} great hexagons (in which the great rectangles are inscribed), as a consequence of the unique circumstance that the 8-cell and 24-cell have the same edge length. In the √0.𝚫 decagon {10} rotations characteristic of the 600-cell, the isocline chords are √1 hexagon edges, the isocline polygram is a pentadecagram, and the isocline has a circumference of 5𝝅.[cn] The isoclinic {15/2} pentadecagram rotation rotates a circle of {15} vertices in the same time as the simple decagon rotation of {10} vertices. The invariant central plane completely orthogonal to each {10} great decagon is a {0} great 0-gon,[al] so a {10} rotation of decagons is also a {0} rotation of planes containing no vertices. The 600-cell's dual polytope the 120-cell inherits the same simple {10} and isoclinic {15/2} rotations, but its characteristic isoclinic rotation takes place in completely orthogonal invariant planes which contain {2} great digons (from its successor the 5-cell).[dr] This is a rotation of irregular great hexagons {6} of two alternating edge lengths (analogous to the tesseract's great rectangles), where the two different-length edges are three 120-cell edges and three 5-cell edges.
- ^ Each discrete fibration of a regular convex 4-polytope is characterized by a unique left-right pair of isoclinic rotations and a unique bundle of great circle {2p} polygons (0 ≤ p ≤ 5) in the invariant planes of that pair of rotations. Each distinct rotation has a unique bundle of left (or right) {p} polygons inscribed in the {2p} polygons, and a unique bundle of skew {2p} polygrams which are its discrete left (or right) isoclines. The {p} polygons weave the {2p} polygrams into a bundle, and vice versa.
- ^ There are six congruent decagonal fibrations of the 600-cell. Choosing one decagonal fibration means choosing a bundle of 12 directly congruent Clifford parallel decagonal great circles, and a cell-disjoint set of 20 directly congruent 30-cell rings which tesselate the 600-cell. The fibration and its great circles are not chiral, but it has distinct left and right expressions in a left-right pair of isoclinic rotations. In the right (left) rotation the vertices move along a right (left) Hopf fiber bundle of Clifford parallel isoclines and intersect a right (left) Hopf fiber bundle of Clifford parallel great pentagons. The 30-cell rings are the only chiral objects, other than the bundles of isoclines or pentagons.[82] A right (left) pentagon bundle contains 12 great pentagons, inscribed in the 12 Clifford parallel great decagons. A right (left) isocline bundle contains 20 Clifford parallel pentadecagrams, one in each 30-cell ring.
- ^ The composition of two simple 60° rotations in a pair of completely orthogonal invariant planes is a 60° isoclinic rotation in four pairs of completely orthogonal invariant planes.[cp] Thus the isoclinic rotation is the compound of four simple rotations, and all 24 vertices rotate in invariant hexagon planes, versus just 6 vertices in a simple rotation.
- ^ a b The 24-cell rotates hexagons on hexagrams, while the 600-cell rotates hexagons on decagrams, but these are discrete instances of the same kind of isoclinic rotation in hexagon invariant planes. In particular, their congruent isoclines are all exactly the same geodesic circle of circumference 4𝝅.[dx]
- ^ a b c An isoclinic rotation by 60° is two simple rotations by 60° at the same time.[do] It moves all the vertices 120° at the same time, in various different directions. Six successive diagonal rotational increments, of 60°x60° each, move each vertex through 720° on a Möbius double loop called an isocline, twice around the 24-cell and back to its point of origin, in the same time (six rotational units) that it would take a simple rotation to take the vertex once around the 24-cell on an ordinary great circle. The helical double loop 4𝝅 isocline is just another kind of single full circle, of the same time interval and period (6 chords) as the simple great circle. The isocline is one true circle,[ch] as perfectly round and geodesic as the simple great circle, even through its chords are √3 longer, its circumference is 4𝝅 instead of 2𝝅,[dp] it circles through four dimensions instead of two,[cw] and it acts in two chiral forms (left and right) even though all such circles of the same circumference are directly congruent.[cv] Nevertheless, to avoid confusion we always refer to it as an isocline and reserve the term great circle for an ordinary great circle in the plane.
- ^ 120 regular 5-cells are inscribed in the 120-cell. The 5-cell has digon central planes, no two of which are orthogonal. It has 10 digon central planes, where each vertex pair is an edge, not an axis. The 5-cell is self-dual, so by reciprocation the 120-cell can be inscribed in a regular 5-cell of larger radius. Therefore the finite sequence of 6 regular 4-polytopes[a] nested like Russian dolls can also be seen as an infinite sequence.
- ^ In the 30-cell ring, each isocline runs from a vertex to a non-adjacent vertex in the third shell of vertices surrounding it. Three other vertices between these two vertices can be seen in the 30-cell ring, two adjacent in the first surrounding shell, and one in the second surrounding shell.
- ^ Chirality and even/odd parity are distinct flavors. Things which have even/odd coordinate parity are black or white: the squares of the chessboard, cells, vertices and the isoclines which connect them by isoclinic rotation.[ao] Everything else is black and white: e.g. adjacent face-bonded cell pairs, or edges and chords which are black at one end and white at the other. (Since it is difficult to color points and lines white, we sometimes use black and red instead of black and white. In particular, isocline chords are sometimes shown as black or red dashed lines.) Things which have chirality come in right or left enantiomorphous forms: isoclinic rotations and chiral objects which include characteristic orthoschemes, pairs of Clifford parallel great polygon planes,[85] fiber bundles of Clifford parallel circles (whether or not the circles themselves are chiral), and the chiral cell rings found in the 16-cell and 600-cell. Things which have neither an even/odd parity nor a chirality include all edges and faces (shared by black and white cells), great circle polygons and their fibrations, and non-chiral cell rings such as the 24-cell's cell rings of octahedra. Some things have both an even/odd parity and a chirality: isoclines are black or white because they connect vertices which are all of the same color, and they act as left or right chiral objects when they are vertex paths in a left or right rotation, although they have no inherent chirality themselves.[dk] Each left (or right) rotation traverses an equal number of black and white isoclines.[cv]
- ^ a b Left and right isoclinic rotations partition the 600 cells (and 120 vertices) into black and white in the same way.[17] The rotations of all fibrations of the same kind of great polygon use the same chessboard, which is a convention of the coordinate system based on even and odd coordinates.[84] Left and right are not colors: in either a left (or right) rotation half the moving vertices are black, running along black isoclines through black vertices, and the other half are white vertices rotating among themselves.[dt]
- ^ Each axis of the 600-cell touches a left isocline of each fibration at one end and a right isocline of the fibration at the other end. Each 30-cell ring's axial isocline passes through only one of the two antipodal vertices of each of the 30 (of 60) 600-cell axes that the isocline's 30-vertex, 30-cell ring touches (at only one end).
- ^ The composition of two simple 36° rotations in a pair of completely orthogonal invariant planes is a 36° isoclinic rotation in twelve pairs of completely orthogonal invariant planes.[cp] Thus the isoclinic rotation is the compound of twelve simple rotations, and all 120 vertices rotate in invariant decagon planes, versus just 10 vertices in a simple rotation.
- ^ All 3-sphere isoclines[ao] of the same circumference are directly congruent circles.[ct] An ordinary great circle is an isocline of circumference 2𝝅; simple rotations take place on 2𝝅 isoclines. Double rotations may have isoclines of other than circumference. The characteristic rotation of a regular 4-polytope is the isoclinic rotation in which the central planes containing its edges are invariant planes of rotation. The 16-cell and 24-cell edge-rotate on isoclines of 4𝝅 circumference. The 600-cell edge-rotates on isoclines of 5𝝅 circumference.
- ^ The 600-cell's helical {20/6}=2{10/3} icosagram is a compound of the 24-cell's helical {6/2} hexagram, which is inscribed within it just as the 24-cell is inscribed in the 600-cell.
- ^ The 16-cell rotates squares on {8/3} octagrams, the 24-cell rotates squares on {24/9}=3{8/3} octagrams, and the 600 rotates squares on {24/5} 24-grams, but these are discrete instances of the same kind of isoclinic rotation in great square invariant planes. In particular, their congruent isoclines are all exactly the same geodesic circle of circumference 4𝝅. They have different isocline polygrams only because the isocline curve intersects more vertices in the 600-cell than it does in the 24-cell or the 16-cell. The 600-cell's helical {24/5} 24-gram is a compound of the 24-cell's helical {24/9} octagram, which is inscribed within the 600-cell just as the 16-cell's helical {8/3} octagram is inscribed within the 24-cell.
Citations
edit- ^ N.W. Johnson: Geometries and Transformations, (2018) ISBN 978-1-107-10340-5 Chapter 11: Finite Symmetry Groups, 11.5 Spherical Coxeter groups, p.249
- ^ Matila Ghyka, The Geometry of Art and Life (1977), p.68
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 136, §7.8 The enumeration of possible regular figures.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 292–293, Table I(ii): The sixteen regular polytopes {p,q,r} in four dimensions; An invaluable table providing all 20 metrics of each 4-polytope in edge length units. They must be algebraically converted to compare polytopes of unit radius.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 153, §8.51; "In fact, the vertices of {3, 3, 5}, each taken 5 times, are the vertices of 25 {3, 4, 3}'s."
- ^ a b Coxeter 1973, p. 305, Table VII: Regular Compounds in Four Dimensions.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 292–293, Table I(ii), "600-cell" column 0R/l = 2𝝓/2.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 156–157, §8.7 Cartesian coordinates.
- ^ a b Coxeter 1973, pp. 151–153, §8.4 The snub {3,4,3}.
- ^ Waegell & Aravind 2009, pp. 3–4, §3.2 The 75 bases of the 600-cell; In the 600-cell the configuration's "points" and "lines" are axes ("rays") and 16-cells ("bases"), respectively.
- ^ a b c Denney et al. 2020.
- ^ a b Denney et al. 2020, p. 438.
- ^ Zamboj 2021, pp. 10–11, §Hopf coordinates.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 298, Table V: The Distribution of Vertices of Four-dimensional Polytopes in Parallel Solid Sections (§13.1); (iii) Sections of {3, 3, 5} (edge 2𝜏−1) beginning with a vertex.
- ^ Oss 1899; van Oss does not mention the arc distances between vertices of the 600-cell.
- ^ Buekenhout & Parker 1998.
- ^ a b c d Dechant 2021, pp. 18–20, §6. The Coxeter Plane.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 298, Table V: The Distribution of Vertices of Four-dimensional Polytopes in Parallel Solid Sections (§13.1); (iii) Sections of {3, 3, 5} (edge 2𝜏−1) beginning with a vertex; see column a.
- ^ Steinbach 1997, p. 23, Figure 3; Steinbach derived a formula relating the diagonals and edge lengths of successive regular polygons, and illustrated it with a "fan of chords" diagram like the one here.
- ^ Baez, John (7 March 2017). "Pi and the Golden Ratio". Azimuth. Retrieved 10 October 2022.
- ^ a b Denney et al. 2020, p. 434.
- ^ Denney et al. 2020, pp. 437–439, §4 The planes of the 600-cell.
- ^ Kim & Rote 2016, pp. 8–10, Relations to Clifford Parallelism.
- ^ a b Sadoc 2001, p. 576, §2.4 Discretising the fibration for the {3, 3, 5} polytope: the ten-fold screw axis.
- ^ Waegell & Aravind 2009, p. 5, §3.4. The 24-cell: points, lines, and Reye's configuration; Here Reye's "points" and "lines" are axes and hexagons, respectively. The dual hexagon planes are not orthogonal to each other, only their dual axis pairs. Dual hexagon pairs do not occur in individual 24-cells, only between 24-cells in the 600-cell.
- ^ a b c Sadoc 2001, pp. 576–577, §2.4 Discretising the fibration for the {3, 3, 5} polytope: the six-fold screw axis.
- ^ a b Sadoc 2001, p. 577, §2.4 Discretising the fibration for the {3, 3, 5} polytope: the four-fold screw axis.
- ^ Copher 2019, p. 6, §3.2 Theorem 3.4.
- ^ Kim & Rote 2016, p. 7, §6 Angles between two Planes in 4-Space; "In four (and higher) dimensions, we need two angles to fix the relative position between two planes. (More generally, k angles are defined between k-dimensional subspaces.)"
- ^ Lemmens & Seidel 1973.
- ^ Mamone, Pileio & Levitt 2010, p. 1433, §4.1; A Cartesian 4-coordinate point (w,x,y,z) is a vector in 4D space from (0,0,0,0). Four-dimensional real space is a vector space: any two vectors can be added or multiplied by a scalar to give another vector. Quaternions extend the vectorial structure of 4D real space by allowing the multiplication of two 4D vectors and according to
- ^ a b Sadoc 2001, pp. 575–578, §2 Geometry of the {3,3,5}-polytope in S3; Sadoc studied all the Hopf fibrations of the 600-cell into sets of {4}, {6} or {10} great circle fibers on different screw axes, gave their Hopf maps, and fully illustrated the characteristic decagonal cell rings.
- ^ Tyrrell & Semple 1971, pp. 6–7, §4. Isoclinic planes in Euclidean space E4.
- ^ a b c Sadoc 2001, pp. 577–578, §2.5 The 30/11 symmetry: an example of other kind of symmetries.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 211, §11.x Historical remarks; "The finite group [32, 2, 1] is isomorphic with the group of incidence-preserving permutations of the 27 lines on the general cubic surface. (For the earliest description of these lines, see Schlafli 2.)".
- ^ Schläfli 1858; this paper of Schläfli's describing the double six configuration was one of the only fragments of his discovery of the regular polytopes in higher dimensions to be published during his lifetime.[35]
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 141–144, §7. Ordinary Polytopes in Higher Space; §7.x. Historical remarks; "Practically all the ideas in this chapter ... are due to Schläfli, who discovered them before 1853 — a time when Cayley, Grassman and Möbius were the only other people who had ever conceived the possibility of geometry in more than three dimensions."
- ^ Coxeter 1970, studied cell rings in the general case of their geometry and group theory, identifying each cell ring as a polytope in its own right which fills a three-dimensional manifold (such as the 3-sphere) with its corresponding honeycomb.[ay] He found that cell rings follow Petrie polygons and some (but not all) cell rings and their honeycombs are twisted, occurring in left- and right-handed chiral forms. Specifically, he found that the regular 4-polytopes with tetrahedral cells (5-cell, 16-cell, 600-cell) have twisted cell rings, and the others (whose cells have opposing faces) do not.[az] Separately, he categorized cell rings by whether they form their honeycombs in hyperbolic or Euclidean space, the latter being those found in the 4-polytopes which can tile 4-space by translation to form Euclidean honeycombs (16-cell, 8-cell, 24-cell).
- ^ Banchoff 2013, studied the decomposition of regular 4-polytopes into honeycombs of tori tiling the Clifford torus, showed how the honeycombs correspond to Hopf fibrations, and made decompositions composed of meridian and equatorial cell rings with illustrations.
- ^ a b Sadoc 2001, p. 578, §2.6 The {3, 3, 5} polytope: a set of four helices.
- ^ Dechant 2021, §1. Introduction.
- ^ Zamboj 2021.
- ^ Sadoc & Charvolin 2009, §1.2 The curved space approach; studies the helical orientation of molecules in crystal structures and their imperfect packings ("frustrations") in 3-dimensional space. "The frustration, which arises when the molecular orientation is transported along the two [circular] AB paths of figure 1 [helix], is imposed by the very topological nature of the Euclidean space R3. It would not occur if the molecules were embedded in the non-Euclidean space of the 3-sphere S3, or hypersphere. This space with a homogeneous positive curvature can indeed be described by equidistant and uniformly twisted fibers,[af] along which the molecules can be aligned without any conflict between compactness and torsion.... The fibres of this Hopf fibration are great circles of S3, the whole family of which is also called the Clifford parallels. Two of these fibers are C∞ symmetry axes for the whole fibration; each fibre makes one turn around each axis and regularly rotates when moving from one axis to another.[bf] These fibers build a double twist configuration while staying parallel, i.e. without any frustration, in the whole volume of S3.[bg] They can therefore be used as models to study the condensation of long molecules in the presence of a double twist constraint."
- ^ a b Coxeter 1973, p. 303, Table VI (iii): 𝐈𝐈 = {3,3,5}.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 153, §8.5 Gosset's construction for {3,3,5}.
- ^ Borovik 2006; "The environment which directed the evolution of our brain never provided our ancestors with four-dimensional experiences.... [Nevertheless] we humans are blessed with a remarkable piece of mathematical software for image processing hardwired into our brains. Coxeter made full use of it, and expected the reader to use it.... Visualization is one of the most powerful interiorization techniques. It anchors mathematical concepts and ideas into one of the most powerful parts of our brain, the visual processing module. Coxeter Theory [of polytopes generated by] finite reflection groups allow[s] an approach to their study based on a systematic reduction of complex geometric configurations to much simpler two- and three-dimensional special cases."
- ^ Miyazaki 1990; Miyazaki showed that the surface envelope of the 600-cell can be realized architecturally in our ordinary 3-dimensional space as physical buildings (geodesic domes).
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 50–52, §3.7.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 293; 164°29'
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 298, Table V: The Distribution of Vertices of Four-dimensional Polytopes in Parallel Solid Sections.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 50–52, §3.7: Coordinates for the vertices of the regular and quasi-regular solids.
- ^ Itoh & Nara 2021, §4. From the 24-cell onto an octahedron; "This article addresses the 24-cell and gives a continuous flattening motion for its 2-skeleton [the cuboctahedron], which is related to the Jitterbug by Buckminster Fuller."
- ^ Koca et al. 2016, p. 145, 4. Pyritohedral Group and Related Polyhedra; see Table 1.
- ^ Verheyen, H. F. (1989). "The complete set of Jitterbug transformers and the analysis of their motion". Computers and Mathematics with Applications. 17 (1–3): 203–250. doi:10.1016/0898-1221(89)90160-0. MR 0994201.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 299, Table V: (iv) Simplified sections of {3,3,5} ... beginning with a cell.
- ^ Sadoc 2001, pp. 576–577, §2.4 Discretising the fibration for the {3, 3, 5}; "Let us now proceed to a toroidal decomposition of the {3, 3, 5} polytope."
- ^ Coxeter 1970, pp. 19–23, §9. The 120-cell and the 600-cell.
- ^ a b Sadoc 2001, pp. 576–577, §2.4 Discretising the fibration for the {3, 3, 5}, Fig. 2. A five fold symmetry column; in caption (sic) dodecagons should be decagons.
- ^ a b c Dechant 2021, pp. 20–22, §7. The Grand Antiprism and H2 × H2.
- ^ Banchoff 1988.
- ^ Zamboj 2021, pp. 6–12, §2 Mathematical background.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 292–293, Table I(ii); 600-cell h1 h2.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 292–293, Table I(ii); "600-cell".
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 139, §7.9 The characteristic simplex.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 290, Table I(ii); "dihedral angles".
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 227−233, §12.7 A necklace of tetrahedral beads.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 33–38, §3.1 Congruent transformations.
- ^ Dechant 2017, pp. 410–419, §6. The Coxeter Plane; see p. 416, Table 1. Summary of the factorisations of the Coxeter versors of the 4D root systems; "Coxeter (reflection) groups in the Clifford framework ... afford a uniquely simple prescription for reflections. Via the Cartan-Dieudonné theorem, performing two reflections successively generates a rotation, which in Clifford algebra is described by a spinor that is simply the geometric product of the two vectors generating the reflections."
- ^ Coxeter 1973, pp. 217–218, §12.2 Congruent transformations.
- ^ Koca, Al-Ajmi & Ozdes Koca 2011, pp. 986–988, 6. Dual of the snub 24-cell.
- ^ Mamone, Pileio & Levitt 2010, pp. 1438–1439, §4.5 Regular Convex 4-Polytopes; the 600-cell has 14,400 symmetry operations (rotations and reflections) as enumerated in Table 2, symmetry group 𝛨4.[co]
- ^ Perez-Gracia & Thomas 2017.
- ^ Stillwell 2001, p. 24.
- ^ Dorst 2019, p. 44, §1. Villarceau Circles; "In mathematics, the path that the (1, 1) knot on the torus traces is also known as a Villarceau circle. Villarceau circles are usually introduced as two intersecting circles that are the cross-section of a torus by a well-chosen plane cutting it. Picking one such circle and rotating it around the torus axis, the resulting family of circles can be used to rule the torus. By nesting tori smartly, the collection of all such circles then form a Hopf fibration.... we prefer to consider the Villarceau circle as the (1, 1) torus knot rather than as a planar cut."
- ^ Mamone, Pileio & Levitt 2010, §4.5 Regular Convex 4-Polytopes, Table 2.
- ^ Waegell & Aravind 2009, pp. 2–5, §3. The 600-cell.
- ^ Kim & Rote 2016, pp. 13–14, §8.2 Equivalence of an Invariant Family and a Hopf Bundle.
- ^ a b Perez-Gracia & Thomas 2017, pp. 12−13, §5. A useful mapping.
- ^ Perez-Gracia & Thomas 2017, pp. 2−3, §2. Isoclinic rotations.
- ^ Kim & Rote 2016, p. 12-16, §8 The Construction of Hopf Fibrations; see §8.3.
- ^ Perez-Gracia & Thomas 2017, §1. Introduction; "This article [will] derive a spectral decomposition of isoclinic rotations and explicit formulas in matrix and Clifford algebra for the computation of Cayley's [isoclinic] factorization."[cp]
- ^ a b c Kim & Rote 2016, p. 14, §8.3 Corollary 9. Every great circle belongs to a unique right [(and left)] Hopf bundle.
- ^ Kim & Rote 2016, pp. 14–16, §8.3 Properties of the Hopf Fibration.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 156: "...the chess-board has an n-dimensional analogue."
- ^ Kim & Rote 2016, p. 8, Left and Right Pairs of Isoclinic Planes.
- ^ Tyrrell & Semple 1971, pp. 34–57, Linear Systems of Clifford Parallels.
- ^ Coxeter 1973, p. 12, §1.8. Configurations.
- ^ van Ittersum 2020, pp. 80–95, §4.3.
- ^ Steinbach 1997, p. 24.
- ^ Stillwell 2001, pp. 22–23, The Poincaré Homology Sphere.
- ^ Mebius 2015, p. 1, "Quaternion algebra is the tool par excellence for the treatment of three- and four- dimensional (3D and 4D) rotations. Obviously only 3D and by implication 2D rotations have an everyday practical meaning, but the theory of 4D rotations turns out to offer the easiest road to the representation of 3D rotations by quaternions.".
- ^ Denney et al. 2020, §2 The Labeling of H4.
- ^ Oss 1899, pp. 1–18.
- ^ Dechant 2021, Abstract; "[E]very 3D root system allows the construction of a corresponding 4D root system via an 'induction theorem'. In this paper, we look at the icosahedral case of H3 → H4 in detail and perform the calculations explicitly. Clifford algebra is used to perform group theoretic calculations based on the versor theorem and the Cartan-Dieudonné theorem ... shed[ding] light on geometric aspects of the H4 root system (the 600-cell) as well as other related polytopes and their symmetries ... including the construction of the Coxeter plane, which is used for visualising the complementary pairs of invariant polytopes.... This approach therefore constitutes a more systematic and general way of performing calculations concerning groups, in particular reflection groups and root systems, in a Clifford algebraic framework."
- ^ Grossman, Wendy A.; Sebline, Edouard, eds. (2015), Man Ray Human Equations: A journey from mathematics to Shakespeare, Hatje Cantz. See in particular mathematical object mo-6.2, p. 58; Antony and Cleopatra, SE-6, p. 59; mathematical object mo-9, p. 64; Merchant of Venice, SE-9, p. 65, and "The Hexacosichoron", Philip Ordning, p. 96.
- ^ Dechant 2021, pp. 22–24, §8. Snub 24-cell.
- ^ Sikiric, Mathieu; Myrvold, Wendy (2007). "The special cuts of 600-cell". Beiträge zur Algebra und Geometrie. 49 (1). arXiv:0708.3443.
- ^ Coxeter 1991, pp. 48–49.
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External links
edit- Weisstein, Eric W. "600-Cell". MathWorld.
- Klitzing, Richard. "4D uniform polytopes (polychora) x3o3o5o - ex".
- Der 600-Zeller (600-cell) Marco Möller's Regular polytopes in R4 (German)
- The 600-Cell Vertex centered expansion of the 600-cell