Talk:Tetrahedral symmetry

Latest comment: 5 years ago by Watchduck in topic Pyritohedral symmetry


Cleanup (Feb 06) edit

I added the cleanup tag because this article needs more work. I like the examples added at the end, but they should be cleaned up, and data tables (pasted from elsewhere) removed as redundant.

Well, not necessarily a lot of work, but more than I want to do tonight!

Tom Ruen 09:21, 22 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Hey, Patrick, what do you think about cleaning up the formatting here? Is it really necessary to have cut&pasted tables here from elsewhere?

Tom Ruen 07:21, 25 February 2006 (UTC)Reply


Rude remark (March 06) edit

Apologies to whoever wrote this, but this page is terrible. An encyclopedia is supposed to explain something to someone who doesnt know about it. Anyone looking up this page would be totally confused. What is needed is just a simple picture of a tetrahedron at the top, a statement that there are 12 or 24 symmetries depending on whether you include reflections or not, and a mention of the group A_4. PCM

I agree, so I added a few sentences at the beginning doing just that. I think the rest of the article needs work but I'm not sure how to proceed on that. --Experiment123 00:21, 14 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
I added the cleanup notice, and mostly because of the cluttered pictures, not willing to step into actual content!
Same issues for
  1. octahedral symmetry
  2. icosahedral symmetry
Tom Ruen 02:29, 14 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
I added the same kind of intro to octahedral symmetry and icosahedral symmetry. Hope it helps! --Experiment123 03:38, 14 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Yep, this page is typical Patrick work. It is rude to say that, but I can see where he worked from a mile. Lots of incomprehinsible wording all around. Oleg Alexandrov (talk) 15:24, 14 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Looks like a good time for some revamping here. I added a subgroup tree as a starter, and added some tables. I have a [4,3] subgroup table with pyritohedral symmetry, so I'll made a smaller table for that here too File:Octahedral subgroup tree.png, possibly being a bit neater, but maybe someone else can remake in SVG. Oh, my proference is for Coxeter notation from n-dimensional uniform polytope work, but where helpful I'll support many notations, like summary here List_of_spherical_symmetry_groups. Tom Ruen (talk) 23:48, 10 May 2013 (UTC)Reply

Wrong reference edit

In sentence It is the direct product of the normal subgroup of T (see above) with Ci. Ci links to Inversive geometry. It is wrong reference link. Must be Point reflection. Jumpow (talk) 21:16, 1 December 2015 (UTC)Reply

Yes, looks like the wikilink isn't correct, whether it was at some point I don't know. I changed to point reflection as you suggested. Tom Ruen (talk) 23:00, 1 December 2015 (UTC)Reply

Pyritohedral symmetry edit

Why is Pyritohedral symmetry a chapter in this article? I think it should be in Octahedral symmetry. Th is a subgroup of Oh, but not of Td. (See File:Full octahedral group; subgroups Hasse diagram.svg) Watchduck (quack) 23:53, 14 September 2018 (UTC)Reply
@Tomruen: Do you think this should stay like this? Watchduck (quack) 00:21, 25 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

It certainly is debatable in my mind, and strange when I first saw it. Can we find some sources to help? Schoenflies notation might explain the grouping as T, Th, Td, and strangely the h extension gives all reflectins for oct/ico, while pyrit for tet (because of lack of inversion symmetry apparently). So from my memory some source would seem to take the chiral symmetries as primary, and the reflective symmetries are doublings of those. So there are two extending symmetries of chiral tetrahedral, and one extending symmetry of chiral octahedral. Tom Ruen (talk) 04:56, 25 October 2018 (UTC)Reply
 
Subgroups of A4×C2 as the pyritohedral group Th or [3+,4]
The relationship between pyritohedral with chiral tetrahedral symmetry can be seen in the diagram on the right. (See also here.) This relationship certainly justifies mentioning Th in the section about T..
Octahedral symmetry is already quite crowded. I think the best choice would be to give Pyritohedral symmetry its own article, and add a small section about it in tetrahedral, octahedral and icosahedral symmetry. Watchduck (quack) 00:00, 27 October 2018 (UTC)Reply