
A regular dodecahedron or pentagonal dodecahedron is a dodecahedron composed of regular pentagonal faces, three meeting at each vertex. It is an example of Platonic solids, described as cosmic stellation by Plato in his dialogues, and it was used as part of Solar System proposed by Johannes Kepler. However, the regular dodecahedron, including the other Platonic solids, has already been described by other philosophers since antiquity.
Regular dodecahedron | |
---|---|
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Type | Platonic solid, Truncated trapezohedron, Goldberg polyhedron |
Faces | 12 regular pentagons |
Edges | 30 |
Vertices | 20 |
Symmetry group | icosahedral symmetry |
Dihedral angle (degrees) | 116.565° |
Properties | convex, regular |
Net | |
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The regular dodecahedron is the family of truncated trapezohedron because it is the result of truncating axial vertices of a pentagonal trapezohedron. It is also a Goldberg polyhedron because it is the initial polyhedron to construct new polyhedrons by the process of chamfering. It has a relation with other Platonic solids, one of them is the regular icosahedron as its dual polyhedron. Other new polyhedrons can be constructed by using regular dodecahedron.
The regular dodecahedron's metric properties and construction are associated with the golden ratio. The regular dodecahedron can be found in many popular cultures: Roman dodecahedron, the children's story, toys, and painting arts. It can also be found in nature and supramolecules, as well as the shape of the universe. The skeleton of a regular dodecahedron can be represented as the graph called the dodecahedral graph, a Platonic graph. Its property of the Hamiltonian, a path visits all of its vertices exactly once, can be found in a toy called icosian game.
As a Platonic solid
Descriptions
The regular dodecahedron is a polyhedron with twelve pentagonal faces, thirty edges, and twenty vertices. It is one of the Platonic solids, a set of polyhedrons in which the faces are regular polygons that are congruent and the same number of faces meet at a vertex. This set of polyhedrons is named after Plato. In Theaetetus, a dialogue of Plato, Plato hypothesized that the classical elements were made of the five uniform regular solids. Plato described the regular dodecahedron, obscurely remarked, "...the god used [it] for arranging the constellations on the whole heaven". Timaeus, as a personage of Plato's dialogue, associates the other four Platonic solids—regular tetrahedron, cube, regular octahedron, and regular icosahedron—with the four classical elements, adding that there is a fifth solid pattern which, though commonly associated with the regular dodecahedron, is never directly mentioned as such; "this God used in the delineation of the universe."Aristotle also postulated that the heavens were made of a fifth element, which he called aithêr (aether in Latin, ether in American English).
Following its attribution with nature by Plato, Johannes Kepler in his Harmonices Mundi sketched each of the Platonic solids, one of them is a regular dodecahedron. In his Mysterium Cosmographicum, Kepler also proposed the Solar System by using the Platonic solids setting into another one and separating them with six spheres resembling the six planets. The ordered solids started from the innermost to the outermost: regular octahedron, regular icosahedron, regular dodecahedron, regular tetrahedron, and cube.
Many antiquity philosophers described the regular dodecahedron, including the rest of the Platonic solids. Theaetetus gave a mathematical description of all five and may have been responsible for the first known proof that no other convex regular polyhedra exist. Euclid completely mathematically described the Platonic solids in the Elements, the last book (Book XIII) of which is devoted to their properties. Propositions 13–17 in Book XIII describe the construction of the tetrahedron, octahedron, cube, icosahedron, and dodecahedron in that order. For each solid, Euclid finds the ratio of the diameter of the circumscribed sphere to the edge length. In Proposition 18 he argues that there are no further convex regular polyhedra. Iamblichus states that Hippasus, a Pythagorean, perished in the sea, because he boasted that he first divulged "the sphere with the twelve pentagons".
The regular dodecahedron, as the family of Platonic solids, is a regular polyhedron. It is isogonal, isohedral, and isotoxal: any two vertices, two faces, and two edges of a regular dodecahedron can be transformed by rotations and reflections under its symmetry orbit respectively, which preserves the appearance.
Relation to the regular icosahedron
The dual polyhedron of a dodecahedron is the regular icosahedron. One property of the dual polyhedron generally is that the original polyhedron and its dual share the same three-dimensional symmetry group. In the case of the regular dodecahedron, it has the same symmetry as the regular icosahedron, the icosahedral symmetry . The regular dodecahedron has ten three-fold axes passing through pairs of opposite vertices, six five-fold axes passing through the opposite faces centers, and fifteen two-fold axes passing through the opposite sides midpoints.
When a regular dodecahedron is inscribed in a sphere, it occupies more of the sphere's volume (66.49%) than an icosahedron inscribed in the same sphere (60.55%). The resulting of both spheres' volumes initially began from the problem by ancient Greeks, determining which of two shapes has a larger volume: an icosahedron inscribed in a sphere, or a dodecahedron inscribed in the same sphere. The problem was solved by Hero of Alexandria, Pappus of Alexandria, and Fibonacci, among others.Apollonius of Perga discovered the curious result that the ratio of volumes of these two shapes is the same as the ratio of their surface areas. Both volumes have formulas involving the golden ratio but are taken to different powers.
Golden rectangle may also related to both regular icosahedron and regular dodecahedron. The regular icosahedron can be constructed by intersecting three golden rectangles perpendicularly, arranged in two-by-two orthogonal, and connecting each of the golden rectangle's vertices with a segment line. There are 12 regular icosahedron vertices, considered as the center of 12 regular dodecahedron faces.
Relation to the regular tetrahedron
As two opposing tetrahedra can be inscribed in a cube, and five cubes can be inscribed in a dodecahedron, ten tetrahedra in five cubes can be inscribed in a dodecahedron: two opposing sets of five, with each set covering all 20 vertices and each vertex in two tetrahedra (one from each set, but not the opposing pair). As stated by Coxeter et al. (1938),
"Just as a tetrahedron can be inscribed in a cube, so a cube can be inscribed in a dodecahedron. By reciprocation, this leads to an octahedron circumscribed about an icosahedron. In fact, each of the twelve vertices of the icosahedron divides an edge of the octahedron according to the "golden section". Given the icosahedron, the circumscribed octahedron can be chosen in five ways, giving a compound of five octahedra, which comes under our definition of stellated icosahedron. (The reciprocal compound, of five cubes whose vertices belong to a dodecahedron, is a stellated triacontahedron.) Another stellated icosahedron can at once be deduced, by stellating each octahedron into a stella octangula, thus forming a compound of ten tetrahedra. Further, we can choose one tetrahedron from each stella octangula, so as to derive a compound of five tetrahedra, which still has all the rotation symmetry of the icosahedron (i.e. the icosahedral group), although it has lost the reflections. By reflecting this figure in any plane of symmetry of the icosahedron, we obtain the complementary set of five tetrahedra. These two sets of five tetrahedra are enantiomorphous, i.e. not directly congruent, but related like a pair of shoes. [Such] a figure which possesses no plane of symmetry (so that it is enantiomorphous to its mirror-image) is said to be chiral."
Configuration matrix
The configuration matrix is a matrix in which the rows and columns correspond to the elements of a polyhedron as in the vertices, edges, and faces. The diagonal of a matrix denotes the number of each element that appears in a polyhedron, whereas the non-diagonal of a matrix denotes the number of the column's elements that occur in or at the row's element. The regular dodecahedron can be represented in the following matrix:
Relation to the golden ratio
The golden ratio is the ratio between two numbers equal to the ratio of their sum to the larger of the two quantities. It is one of two roots of a polynomial, expressed as . The golden ratio can be applied to the regular dodecahedron's metric properties, as well as to construct the regular dodecahedron.
The surface area and the volume
of a regular dodecahedron of edge length
are:
- : the orange vertices lie at (±1, ±1, ±1).
- : the green vertices lie at (0, ±ϕ, ±1/ϕ) and form a rectangle on the yz-plane.
- : the blue vertices lie at (±1/ϕ, 0, ±ϕ) and form a rectangle on the xz-plane.
- : the pink vertices lie at (±ϕ, ±1/ϕ, 0) and form a rectangle on the xy-plane.
The following Cartesian coordinates define the twenty vertices of a regular dodecahedron centered at the origin and suitably scaled and oriented:
If the edge length of a regular dodecahedron is , the radius of a circumscribed sphere
(one that touches the regular dodecahedron at all vertices), the radius of an inscribed sphere
(tangent to each of the regular dodecahedron's faces), and the midradius
(one that touches the middle of each edge) are:
Given a regular dodecahedron of edge length one,
is the radius of a circumscribing sphere about a cube of edge length
, and
is the apothem of a regular pentagon of edge length
.
The dihedral angle of a regular dodecahedron between every two adjacent pentagonal faces is , approximately 116.565°.
Other related geometric objects
The regular dodecahedron can be interpreted as a truncated trapezohedron. It is the set of polyhedrons that can be constructed by truncating the two axial vertices of a trapezohedron. Here, the regular dodecahedron is constructed by truncating the pentagonal trapezohedron.
The regular dodecahedron can be interpreted as the Goldberg polyhedron. It is a set of polyhedrons containing hexagonal and pentagonal faces. Other than two Platonic solids—tetrahedron and cube—the regular dodecahedron is the initial of Goldberg polyhedron construction, and the next polyhedron is resulted by truncating all of its edges, a process called chamfer. This process can be continuously repeated, resulting in more new Goldberg's polyhedrons. These polyhedrons are classified as the first class of a Goldberg polyhedron.
The stellations of the regular dodecahedron make up three of the four Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra. The first stellation of a regular dodecahedron is constructed by attaching its layer with pentagonal pyramids, forming a small stellated dodecahedron. The second stellation is by attaching the small stellated dodecahedron with wedges, forming a great dodecahedron. The third stellation is by attaching the great dodecahedron with the sharp triangular pyramids, forming a great stellated dodecahedron.
Appearances
In arts and popular cultures
Regular dodecahedra have been used as dice and probably also as divinatory devices. During the Hellenistic era, small hollow bronze Roman dodecahedra were made and have been found in various Roman ruins in Europe. Its purpose is not certain.
In 20th-century art, dodecahedra appears in the work of M. C. Escher, such as his lithographs Reptiles, and Salvador Dalí's painting The Sacrament of the Last Supper in which the room is a hollow regular dodecahedron).Gerard Caris based his entire artistic oeuvre on the regular dodecahedron and the pentagon, presented as a new art movement coined Pentagonism.
In modern role-playing games, the regular dodecahedron is often used as a twelve-sided die, one of the more common polyhedral dice. The Megaminx is a twisted puzzle similar to the Rubik's Cube but the shape is pentagonal faces dodecahedral.
In the children's novel The Phantom Tollbooth, the regular dodecahedron appears as a character in the land of Mathematics. Each face of the regular dodecahedron describes the various facial expressions, swiveling to the front as required to match his mood.[citation needed]
In Bertrand Russell's 1954 short story "The Mathematician's Nightmare: The Vision of Professor Squarepunt", the number 5 said: "I am the number of fingers on a hand. I make pentagons and pentagrams. And but for me dodecahedra could not exist; and, as everyone knows, the universe is a dodecahedron. So, but for me, there could be no universe."
In nature
The fossil coccolithophore Braarudosphaera bigelowii (see figure), a unicellular coastal phytoplanktonic alga, has a calcium carbonate shell with a regular dodecahedral structure about 10 micrometers across.
The hydrocarbon dodecahedrane, some quasicrystals and cages have dodecahedral shape (see figure). Some regular crystals such as garnet and diamond are also said to exhibit "dodecahedral" habit, but this statement actually refers to the rhombic dodecahedron shape.
Various models have been proposed for the global geometry of the universe. These proposals include the Poincaré dodecahedral space, a positively curved space consisting of a regular dodecahedron whose opposite faces correspond (with a small twist). This was proposed by Jean-Pierre Luminet and colleagues in 2003, and an optimal orientation on the sky for the model was estimated in 2008.
Dodecahedral graph
According to Steinitz's theorem, the graph can be represented as the skeleton of a polyhedron; roughly speaking, a framework of a polyhedron. Such a graph has two properties. It is planar, meaning the edges of a graph are connected to every vertex without crossing other edges. It is also three-connected graph, meaning that, whenever a graph with more than three vertices, and two of the vertices are removed, the edges remain connected. The skeleton of a regular dodecahedron can be represented as a graph, and it is called the dodecahedral graph, a Platonic graph.
This graph can also be constructed as the generalized Petersen graph , where the vertices of a decagon are connected to those of two pentagons, one pentagon connected to odd vertices of the decagon and the other pentagon connected to the even vertices. Geometrically, this can be visualized as the ten-vertex equatorial belt of the dodecahedron connected to the two 5-vertex polar regions, one on each side.
The high degree of symmetry of the polygon is replicated in the properties of this graph, which are distance-transitive, distance-regular, and symmetric. The automorphism group has order a hundred and twenty. The vertices can be colored with 3 colors, as can the edges, and the diameter is five.
The dodecahedral graph is Hamiltonian, meaning a path visits all of its vertices exactly once. The name of this property is named after William Rowan Hamilton, who invented a mathematical game known as the icosian game. The game's object was to find a Hamiltonian cycle along the edges of a dodecahedron.
Notes
- Strictly speaking, a pentagonal dodecahedron need not be composed of regular pentagons. The name "pentagonal dodecahedron" therefore covers a wider class of solids than just the Platonic solid, the regular dodecahedron.
See also
- 120-cell, a regular polychoron (4D polytope whose surface consists of a hundred and twenty dodecahedral cells)
- Braarudosphaera bigelowii − A dodecahedron shaped coccolithophore (a unicellular phytoplankton algae).
- Dodecahedrane (molecule)
- Icosahedral twins - Nanoparticles which can have the shape of a regular dodecahedron.
- Pentakis dodecahedron
- Snub dodecahedron
- Truncated dodecahedron
References
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- Plato, Timaeus, Jowett translation [line 1317–8]; the Greek word translated as delineation is diazographein, painting in semblance of life.
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- Paeth, Alan W. (1991). "Exact Dihedral Metric for Common Polyhedra". In Arvo, James (ed.). Graphics Gems II. Academic Press. p. 177. Bibcode:1991grge.book.....A.
- Coxeter (1973) Table I(i), pp. 292–293. See the columns labeled
,
, and
, Coxeter's notation for the circumradius, midradius, and inradius, respectively, also noting that Coxeter uses
as the edge length (see p. 2).
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- Dunlap, R. A. (1992). Hargittai, Istvan (ed.). Fivefold Symmetry. World Scientific. p. 493. ISBN 978-981-4522-40-3.
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- Russell, Bertrand. "Nightmares of Eminent Persons and Other Stories". Internet Archive. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
- Kai Wu; Jonathan Nitschke (2023). "Systematic construction of progressively larger capsules from a fivefold linking pyrrole-based subcomponent" (PDF). Nature Synthesis. 2 (8): 789. Bibcode:2023NatSy...2..789W. doi:10.1038/s44160-023-00276-9.
- Hagino, K., Onuma, R., Kawachi, M. and Horiguchi, T. (2013) "Discovery of an endosymbiotic nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium UCYN-A in Braarudosphaera bigelowii (Prymnesiophyceae)". PLoS One, 8(12): e81749. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0081749.
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- Dumé, Belle (2003-10-08). "Is The Universe A Dodecahedron?". PhysicsWorld. Archived from the original on 2012-04-25.
- Luminet, Jean-Pierre; Jeff Weeks; Alain Riazuelo; Roland Lehoucq; Jean-Phillipe Uzan (2003-10-09). "Dodecahedral space topology as an explanation for weak wide-angle temperature correlations in the cosmic microwave background". Nature. 425 (6958): 593–5. arXiv:astro-ph/0310253. Bibcode:2003Natur.425..593L. doi:10.1038/nature01944. PMID 14534579. S2CID 4380713.
- Roukema, Boudewijn; Zbigniew Buliński; Agnieszka Szaniewska; Nicolas E. Gaudin (2008). "A test of the Poincaré dodecahedral space topology hypothesis with the WMAP CMB data". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 482 (3): 747. arXiv:0801.0006. Bibcode:2008A&A...482..747L. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20078777. S2CID 1616362.
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- Ziegler, Günter M. (1995). "Chapter 4: Steinitz' Theorem for 3-Polytopes". Lectures on Polytopes. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 152. Springer-Verlag. pp. 103–126. ISBN 0-387-94365-X.
- Rudolph, Michael (2022). The Mathematics of Finite Networks: An Introduction to Operator Graph Theory. Cambridge University Press. p. 25. doi:10.1007/9781316466919 (inactive 1 November 2024). ISBN 9781316466919.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link) - Pisanski, Tomaž; Servatius, Brigitte (2013). Configuration from a Graphical Viewpoint. Springer. p. 81. doi:10.1007/978-0-8176-8364-1. ISBN 978-0-8176-8363-4.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Dodecahedral Graph". MathWorld.
- Bondy, J. A.; Murty, U. S. R. (1976), Graph Theory with Applications, North Holland, p. 53, ISBN 0-444-19451-7
External links
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Regular Dodecahedron". MathWorld.
- Klitzing, Richard. "3D convex uniform polyhedra o3o5x – doe".
- Editable printable net of a dodecahedron with interactive 3D view
- The Uniform Polyhedra
- Origami Polyhedra – Models made with Modular Origami
- Dodecahedron – 3-d model that works in your browser
- Virtual Reality Polyhedra The Encyclopedia of Polyhedra
- VRML#Regular dodecahedron
- K.J.M. MacLean, A Geometric Analysis of the Five Platonic Solids and Other Semi-Regular Polyhedra
- Dodecahedron 3D Visualization
- Stella: Polyhedron Navigator: Software used to create some of the images on this page.
- How to make a dodecahedron from a Styrofoam cube
- The Greek, Indian, and Chinese Elements – Seven Element Theory
A regular dodecahedron or pentagonal dodecahedron is a dodecahedron composed of regular pentagonal faces three meeting at each vertex It is an example of Platonic solids described as cosmic stellation by Plato in his dialogues and it was used as part of Solar System proposed by Johannes Kepler However the regular dodecahedron including the other Platonic solids has already been described by other philosophers since antiquity Regular dodecahedronTypePlatonic solid Truncated trapezohedron Goldberg polyhedronFaces12 regular pentagonsEdges30Vertices20Symmetry groupicosahedral symmetry Ih displaystyle mathrm I mathrm h Dihedral angle degrees 116 565 Propertiesconvex regularNet The regular dodecahedron is the family of truncated trapezohedron because it is the result of truncating axial vertices of a pentagonal trapezohedron It is also a Goldberg polyhedron because it is the initial polyhedron to construct new polyhedrons by the process of chamfering It has a relation with other Platonic solids one of them is the regular icosahedron as its dual polyhedron Other new polyhedrons can be constructed by using regular dodecahedron The regular dodecahedron s metric properties and construction are associated with the golden ratio The regular dodecahedron can be found in many popular cultures Roman dodecahedron the children s story toys and painting arts It can also be found in nature and supramolecules as well as the shape of the universe The skeleton of a regular dodecahedron can be represented as the graph called the dodecahedral graph a Platonic graph Its property of the Hamiltonian a path visits all of its vertices exactly once can be found in a toy called icosian game As a Platonic solidDescriptions Regular dodecahedron painting by Johannes KeplerKepler s Platonic solid model of the Solar System The regular dodecahedron is a polyhedron with twelve pentagonal faces thirty edges and twenty vertices It is one of the Platonic solids a set of polyhedrons in which the faces are regular polygons that are congruent and the same number of faces meet at a vertex This set of polyhedrons is named after Plato In Theaetetus a dialogue of Plato Plato hypothesized that the classical elements were made of the five uniform regular solids Plato described the regular dodecahedron obscurely remarked the god used it for arranging the constellations on the whole heaven Timaeus as a personage of Plato s dialogue associates the other four Platonic solids regular tetrahedron cube regular octahedron and regular icosahedron with the four classical elements adding that there is a fifth solid pattern which though commonly associated with the regular dodecahedron is never directly mentioned as such this God used in the delineation of the universe Aristotle also postulated that the heavens were made of a fifth element which he called aither aether in Latin ether in American English Following its attribution with nature by Plato Johannes Kepler in his Harmonices Mundi sketched each of the Platonic solids one of them is a regular dodecahedron In his Mysterium Cosmographicum Kepler also proposed the Solar System by using the Platonic solids setting into another one and separating them with six spheres resembling the six planets The ordered solids started from the innermost to the outermost regular octahedron regular icosahedron regular dodecahedron regular tetrahedron and cube 3D model of a regular dodecahedron Many antiquity philosophers described the regular dodecahedron including the rest of the Platonic solids Theaetetus gave a mathematical description of all five and may have been responsible for the first known proof that no other convex regular polyhedra exist Euclid completely mathematically described the Platonic solids in the Elements the last book Book XIII of which is devoted to their properties Propositions 13 17 in Book XIII describe the construction of the tetrahedron octahedron cube icosahedron and dodecahedron in that order For each solid Euclid finds the ratio of the diameter of the circumscribed sphere to the edge length In Proposition 18 he argues that there are no further convex regular polyhedra Iamblichus states that Hippasus a Pythagorean perished in the sea because he boasted that he first divulged the sphere with the twelve pentagons The regular dodecahedron as the family of Platonic solids is a regular polyhedron It is isogonal isohedral and isotoxal any two vertices two faces and two edges of a regular dodecahedron can be transformed by rotations and reflections under its symmetry orbit respectively which preserves the appearance Relation to the regular icosahedron The regular icosahedron inside the regular dodecahedron The dual polyhedron of a dodecahedron is the regular icosahedron One property of the dual polyhedron generally is that the original polyhedron and its dual share the same three dimensional symmetry group In the case of the regular dodecahedron it has the same symmetry as the regular icosahedron the icosahedral symmetry Ih displaystyle mathrm I mathrm h The regular dodecahedron has ten three fold axes passing through pairs of opposite vertices six five fold axes passing through the opposite faces centers and fifteen two fold axes passing through the opposite sides midpoints When a regular dodecahedron is inscribed in a sphere it occupies more of the sphere s volume 66 49 than an icosahedron inscribed in the same sphere 60 55 The resulting of both spheres volumes initially began from the problem by ancient Greeks determining which of two shapes has a larger volume an icosahedron inscribed in a sphere or a dodecahedron inscribed in the same sphere The problem was solved by Hero of Alexandria Pappus of Alexandria and Fibonacci among others Apollonius of Perga discovered the curious result that the ratio of volumes of these two shapes is the same as the ratio of their surface areas Both volumes have formulas involving the golden ratio but are taken to different powers Golden rectangle may also related to both regular icosahedron and regular dodecahedron The regular icosahedron can be constructed by intersecting three golden rectangles perpendicularly arranged in two by two orthogonal and connecting each of the golden rectangle s vertices with a segment line There are 12 regular icosahedron vertices considered as the center of 12 regular dodecahedron faces Relation to the regular tetrahedron Five tetrahedra inscribed in a dodecahedron Five opposing tetrahedra not shown can also be inscribed As two opposing tetrahedra can be inscribed in a cube and five cubes can be inscribed in a dodecahedron ten tetrahedra in five cubes can be inscribed in a dodecahedron two opposing sets of five with each set covering all 20 vertices and each vertex in two tetrahedra one from each set but not the opposing pair As stated by Coxeter et al 1938 Just as a tetrahedron can be inscribed in a cube so a cube can be inscribed in a dodecahedron By reciprocation this leads to an octahedron circumscribed about an icosahedron In fact each of the twelve vertices of the icosahedron divides an edge of the octahedron according to the golden section Given the icosahedron the circumscribed octahedron can be chosen in five ways giving a compound of five octahedra which comes under our definition of stellated icosahedron The reciprocal compound of five cubes whose vertices belong to a dodecahedron is a stellated triacontahedron Another stellated icosahedron can at once be deduced by stellating each octahedron into a stella octangula thus forming a compound of ten tetrahedra Further we can choose one tetrahedron from each stella octangula so as to derive a compound of five tetrahedra which still has all the rotation symmetry of the icosahedron i e the icosahedral group although it has lost the reflections By reflecting this figure in any plane of symmetry of the icosahedron we obtain the complementary set of five tetrahedra These two sets of five tetrahedra are enantiomorphous i e not directly congruent but related like a pair of shoes Such a figure which possesses no plane of symmetry so that it is enantiomorphous to its mirror image is said to be chiral Configuration matrix The configuration matrix is a matrix in which the rows and columns correspond to the elements of a polyhedron as in the vertices edges and faces The diagonal of a matrix denotes the number of each element that appears in a polyhedron whereas the non diagonal of a matrix denotes the number of the column s elements that occur in or at the row s element The regular dodecahedron can be represented in the following matrix 203323025512 displaystyle begin bmatrix 20 amp 3 amp 3 2 amp 30 amp 2 5 amp 5 amp 12 end bmatrix Relation to the golden ratioThe golden ratio is the ratio between two numbers equal to the ratio of their sum to the larger of the two quantities It is one of two roots of a polynomial expressed as ϕ 1 5 2 1 618 textstyle phi 1 sqrt 5 2 approx 1 618 The golden ratio can be applied to the regular dodecahedron s metric properties as well as to construct the regular dodecahedron The surface area A displaystyle A and the volume V displaystyle V of a regular dodecahedron of edge length a displaystyle a are A 15ϕ3 ϕa2 V 5ϕ36 2ϕa3 displaystyle A frac 15 phi sqrt 3 phi a 2 qquad V frac 5 phi 3 6 2 phi a 3 Cartesian coordinates of a regular dodecahedron in the following the orange vertices lie at 1 1 1 the green vertices lie at 0 ϕ 1 ϕ and form a rectangle on the yz plane the blue vertices lie at 1 ϕ 0 ϕ and form a rectangle on the xz plane the pink vertices lie at ϕ 1 ϕ 0 and form a rectangle on the xy plane The following Cartesian coordinates define the twenty vertices of a regular dodecahedron centered at the origin and suitably scaled and oriented 1 1 1 0 ϕ 1 ϕ 1 ϕ 0 ϕ ϕ 1 ϕ 0 displaystyle begin aligned pm 1 pm 1 pm 1 amp qquad 0 pm phi pm 1 phi pm 1 phi 0 pm phi amp qquad pm phi pm 1 phi 0 end aligned If the edge length of a regular dodecahedron is a displaystyle a the radius of a circumscribed sphere rc displaystyle r c one that touches the regular dodecahedron at all vertices the radius of an inscribed sphere ri displaystyle r i tangent to each of the regular dodecahedron s faces and the midradius rm displaystyle r m one that touches the middle of each edge are rc ϕ32a 1 401a ri ϕ223 ϕa 1 114a rm ϕ22a 1 309a displaystyle begin aligned r c amp frac phi sqrt 3 2 a approx 1 401a r i amp frac phi 2 2 sqrt 3 phi a approx 1 114a r m amp frac phi 2 2 a approx 1 309a end aligned Given a regular dodecahedron of edge length one rc displaystyle r c is the radius of a circumscribing sphere about a cube of edge length ϕ displaystyle phi and ri displaystyle r i is the apothem of a regular pentagon of edge length ϕ displaystyle phi The dihedral angle of a regular dodecahedron between every two adjacent pentagonal faces is 2arctan ϕ displaystyle 2 arctan phi approximately 116 565 Other related geometric objectsThe regular dodecahedron can be interpreted as a truncated trapezohedron It is the set of polyhedrons that can be constructed by truncating the two axial vertices of a trapezohedron Here the regular dodecahedron is constructed by truncating the pentagonal trapezohedron The regular dodecahedron can be interpreted as the Goldberg polyhedron It is a set of polyhedrons containing hexagonal and pentagonal faces Other than two Platonic solids tetrahedron and cube the regular dodecahedron is the initial of Goldberg polyhedron construction and the next polyhedron is resulted by truncating all of its edges a process called chamfer This process can be continuously repeated resulting in more new Goldberg s polyhedrons These polyhedrons are classified as the first class of a Goldberg polyhedron The stellations of the regular dodecahedron make up three of the four Kepler Poinsot polyhedra The first stellation of a regular dodecahedron is constructed by attaching its layer with pentagonal pyramids forming a small stellated dodecahedron The second stellation is by attaching the small stellated dodecahedron with wedges forming a great dodecahedron The third stellation is by attaching the great dodecahedron with the sharp triangular pyramids forming a great stellated dodecahedron AppearancesIn arts and popular cultures Roman dodecahedraA solved six color sided Megaminx Regular dodecahedra have been used as dice and probably also as divinatory devices During the Hellenistic era small hollow bronze Roman dodecahedra were made and have been found in various Roman ruins in Europe Its purpose is not certain In 20th century art dodecahedra appears in the work of M C Escher such as his lithographs Reptiles and Salvador Dali s painting The Sacrament of the Last Supper in which the room is a hollow regular dodecahedron Gerard Caris based his entire artistic oeuvre on the regular dodecahedron and the pentagon presented as a new art movement coined Pentagonism In modern role playing games the regular dodecahedron is often used as a twelve sided die one of the more common polyhedral dice The Megaminx is a twisted puzzle similar to the Rubik s Cube but the shape is pentagonal faces dodecahedral In the children s novel The Phantom Tollbooth the regular dodecahedron appears as a character in the land of Mathematics Each face of the regular dodecahedron describes the various facial expressions swiveling to the front as required to match his mood citation needed In Bertrand Russell s 1954 short story The Mathematician s Nightmare The Vision of Professor Squarepunt the number 5 said I am the number of fingers on a hand I make pentagons and pentagrams And but for me dodecahedra could not exist and as everyone knows the universe is a dodecahedron So but for me there could be no universe In nature The fossil record of the coccolithophore Braarudosphaera bigelowii goes back a hundred million years The faces of a Holmium magnesium zinc Ho Mg Zn quasicrystal are true regular pentagons Crystal structure of Co20L12 dodecahedron reported by Kai Wu Jonathan Nitschke and co workers at University of Cambridge in Nat Synth The fossil coccolithophore Braarudosphaera bigelowii see figure a unicellular coastal phytoplanktonic alga has a calcium carbonate shell with a regular dodecahedral structure about 10 micrometers across The hydrocarbon dodecahedrane some quasicrystals and cages have dodecahedral shape see figure Some regular crystals such as garnet and diamond are also said to exhibit dodecahedral habit but this statement actually refers to the rhombic dodecahedron shape Various models have been proposed for the global geometry of the universe These proposals include the Poincare dodecahedral space a positively curved space consisting of a regular dodecahedron whose opposite faces correspond with a small twist This was proposed by Jean Pierre Luminet and colleagues in 2003 and an optimal orientation on the sky for the model was estimated in 2008 Dodecahedral graphThe dodecahedral graph s Hamiltonian property and the mathematical toy Icosian game According to Steinitz s theorem the graph can be represented as the skeleton of a polyhedron roughly speaking a framework of a polyhedron Such a graph has two properties It is planar meaning the edges of a graph are connected to every vertex without crossing other edges It is also three connected graph meaning that whenever a graph with more than three vertices and two of the vertices are removed the edges remain connected The skeleton of a regular dodecahedron can be represented as a graph and it is called the dodecahedral graph a Platonic graph This graph can also be constructed as the generalized Petersen graph G 10 2 displaystyle G 10 2 where the vertices of a decagon are connected to those of two pentagons one pentagon connected to odd vertices of the decagon and the other pentagon connected to the even vertices Geometrically this can be visualized as the ten vertex equatorial belt of the dodecahedron connected to the two 5 vertex polar regions one on each side The high degree of symmetry of the polygon is replicated in the properties of this graph which are distance transitive distance regular and symmetric The automorphism group has order a hundred and twenty The vertices can be colored with 3 colors as can the edges and the diameter is five The dodecahedral graph is Hamiltonian meaning a path visits all of its vertices exactly once The name of this property is named after William Rowan Hamilton who invented a mathematical game known as the icosian game The game s object was to find a Hamiltonian cycle along the edges of a dodecahedron NotesStrictly speaking a pentagonal dodecahedron need not be composed of regular pentagons The name pentagonal dodecahedron therefore covers a wider class of solids than just the Platonic solid the regular dodecahedron See also120 cell a regular polychoron 4D polytope whose surface consists of a hundred and twenty dodecahedral cells Braarudosphaera bigelowii A dodecahedron shaped coccolithophore a unicellular phytoplankton algae Dodecahedrane molecule Icosahedral twins Nanoparticles which can have the shape of a regular dodecahedron Pentakis dodecahedron Snub dodecahedron Truncated dodecahedronReferencesSutton Daud 2002 Platonic amp Archimedean Solids Wooden Books Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 55 ISBN 9780802713865 Herrmann Diane L Sally Paul J 2013 Number Shape amp Symmetry An Introduction to Number Theory Geometry and Group Theory Taylor amp Francis p 252 ISBN 978 1 4665 5464 1 Plato Timaeus Jowett translation line 1317 8 the Greek word translated as delineation is diazographein painting in semblance of life Wildberg Christian 1988 John Philoponus Criticism of Aristotle s Theory of Aether Walter de Gruyter pp 11 12 ISBN 9783110104462 Cromwell Peter R 1997 Polyhedra Cambridge University Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 521 55432 9 Livio 2003 p 147 Florian Cajori A History of Mathematics 1893 Erickson Martin 2011 Beautiful Mathematics Mathematical Association of America p 62 ISBN 978 1 61444 509 8 Weils David 1991 The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Geometry Penguin Books p 57 58 ISBN 9780140118131 Buker W E Eggleton R B 1969 The Platonic Solids Solution to problem E2053 American Mathematical Monthly 76 2 192 doi 10 2307 2317282 JSTOR 2317282 Herz Fischler Roger 2013 A Mathematical History of the Golden Number Courier Dover Publications pp 138 140 ISBN 9780486152325 Simmons George F 2007 Calculus Gems Brief Lives and Memorable Mathematics Mathematical Association of America p 50 ISBN 9780883855614 Marar Ton 2022 A Ludic Journey into Geometric Topology Cham Springer p 23 doi 10 1007 978 3 031 07442 4 ISBN 978 3 031 07442 4 Coxeter H S M du Val Patrick Flather H T Petrie J F 1938 The Fifty Nine Icosahedra Vol 6 University of Toronto Studies Mathematical Series p 4 Coxeter H S M 1973 1948 1 8 Configurations Regular Polytopes 3rd ed New York Dover Publications Coxeter H S M 1991 Regular Complex Polytopes 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 117 Schielack Vincent P 1987 The Fibonacci Sequence and the Golden Ratio The Mathematics Teacher 80 5 357 358 doi 10 5951 MT 80 5 0357 JSTOR 27965402 This source contains an elementary derivation of the golden ratio s value Peters J M H 1978 An Approximate Relation between p and the Golden Ratio The Mathematical Gazette 62 421 197 198 doi 10 2307 3616690 JSTOR 3616690 S2CID 125919525 Livio Mario 2003 2002 The Golden Ratio The Story of Phi the World s Most Astonishing Number First trade paperback ed New York City Broadway Books pp 70 71 ISBN 0 7679 0816 3 Paeth Alan W 1991 Exact Dihedral Metric for Common Polyhedra In Arvo James ed Graphics Gems II Academic Press p 177 Bibcode 1991grge book A Coxeter 1973 Table I i pp 292 293 See the columns labeled 0R ℓ displaystyle 0 mathrm R ell 1R ℓ displaystyle 1 mathrm R ell and 2R ℓ displaystyle 2 mathrm R ell Coxeter s notation for the circumradius midradius and inradius respectively also noting that Coxeter uses 2ℓ displaystyle 2 ell as the edge length see p 2 Hart George 2012 Goldberg Polyhedra In Senechal Marjorie ed Shaping Space 2nd ed Springer p 127 doi 10 1007 978 0 387 92714 5 9 ISBN 978 0 387 92713 8 Cromwell 1997 p 265 Guggenberger Michael 2013 The Gallo Roman Dodecahedron The Mathematical Intelligencer 35 4 Springer Science and Business Media LLC 56 60 doi 10 1007 s00283 013 9403 7 ISSN 0343 6993 S2CID 122337773 Hill Christopher 1994 Gallo Roman Dodecahedra A Progress Report The Antiquaries Journal 74 Cambridge University Press 289 292 doi 10 1017 s0003581500024458 ISSN 0003 5815 S2CID 161691752 Dunlap R A 1992 Hargittai Istvan ed Fivefold Symmetry World Scientific p 493 ISBN 978 981 4522 40 3 Livio 2003 p 9 Joyner David 2008 Adventures in Group Theory Rubik s Cube Merlin s Machine and Other Mathematical Toys 2nd ed The Johns Hopkins University Press p 79 ISBN 978 0 8018 9012 3 Russell Bertrand Nightmares of Eminent Persons and Other Stories Internet Archive Retrieved 10 November 2024 Kai Wu Jonathan Nitschke 2023 Systematic construction of progressively larger capsules from a fivefold linking pyrrole based subcomponent PDF Nature Synthesis 2 8 789 Bibcode 2023NatSy 2 789W doi 10 1038 s44160 023 00276 9 Hagino K Onuma R Kawachi M and Horiguchi T 2013 Discovery of an endosymbiotic nitrogen fixing cyanobacterium UCYN A in Braarudosphaera bigelowii Prymnesiophyceae PLoS One 8 12 e81749 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0081749 Dodecahedral Crystal Habit Archived 12 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Dume Belle 2003 10 08 Is The Universe A Dodecahedron PhysicsWorld Archived from the original on 2012 04 25 Luminet Jean Pierre Jeff Weeks Alain Riazuelo Roland Lehoucq Jean Phillipe Uzan 2003 10 09 Dodecahedral space topology as an explanation for weak wide angle temperature correlations in the cosmic microwave background Nature 425 6958 593 5 arXiv astro ph 0310253 Bibcode 2003Natur 425 593L doi 10 1038 nature01944 PMID 14534579 S2CID 4380713 Roukema Boudewijn Zbigniew Bulinski Agnieszka Szaniewska Nicolas E Gaudin 2008 A test of the Poincare dodecahedral space topology hypothesis with the WMAP CMB data Astronomy and Astrophysics 482 3 747 arXiv 0801 0006 Bibcode 2008A amp A 482 747L doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20078777 S2CID 1616362 Grunbaum Branko 2003 13 1 Steinitz s theorem Convex Polytopes Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 221 2nd ed Springer Verlag pp 235 244 ISBN 0 387 40409 0 Ziegler Gunter M 1995 Chapter 4 Steinitz Theorem for 3 Polytopes Lectures on Polytopes Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 152 Springer Verlag pp 103 126 ISBN 0 387 94365 X Rudolph Michael 2022 The Mathematics of Finite Networks An Introduction to Operator Graph Theory Cambridge University Press p 25 doi 10 1007 9781316466919 inactive 1 November 2024 ISBN 9781316466919 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of November 2024 link Pisanski Tomaz Servatius Brigitte 2013 Configuration from a Graphical Viewpoint Springer p 81 doi 10 1007 978 0 8176 8364 1 ISBN 978 0 8176 8363 4 Weisstein Eric W Dodecahedral Graph MathWorld Bondy J A Murty U S R 1976 Graph Theory with Applications North Holland p 53 ISBN 0 444 19451 7External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Dodecahedron Weisstein Eric W Regular Dodecahedron MathWorld Klitzing Richard 3D convex uniform polyhedra o3o5x doe Editable printable net of a dodecahedron with interactive 3D view The Uniform Polyhedra Origami Polyhedra Models made with Modular Origami Dodecahedron 3 d model that works in your browser Virtual Reality Polyhedra The Encyclopedia of Polyhedra VRML Regular dodecahedron K J M MacLean A Geometric Analysis of the Five Platonic Solids and Other Semi Regular Polyhedra Dodecahedron 3D Visualization Stella Polyhedron Navigator Software used to create some of the images on this page How to make a dodecahedron from a Styrofoam cube The Greek Indian and Chinese Elements Seven Element Theory