![Tesseract](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi80LzQ0LzgtY2VsbF92ZXJmLnN2Zy8xNjAwcHgtOC1jZWxsX3ZlcmYuc3ZnLnBuZw==.png )
In geometry, a tesseract or 4-cube is a four-dimensional hypercube, analogous to a two-dimensional square and a three-dimensional cube. Just as the perimeter of the square consists of four edges and the surface of the cube consists of six square faces, the hypersurface of the tesseract consists of eight cubical cells, meeting at right angles. The tesseract is one of the six convex regular 4-polytopes.
Tesseract 8-cell (4-cube) | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Type | Convex regular 4-polytope |
Schläfli symbol | {4,3,3} t0,3{4,3,2} or {4,3}×{ } t0,2{4,2,4} or {4}×{4} t0,2,3{4,2,2} or {4}×{ }×{ } t0,1,2,3{2,2,2} or { }×{ }×{ }×{ } |
Coxeter diagram | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Cells | 8 {4,3} ![]() |
Faces | 24 {4} |
Edges | 32 |
Vertices | 16 |
Vertex figure | ![]() Tetrahedron |
Petrie polygon | octagon |
Coxeter group | B4, [3,3,4] |
Dual | 16-cell |
Properties | convex, isogonal, isotoxal, isohedral, Hanner polytope |
Uniform index | 10 |
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODJMell3THpndFkyVnNiRjl1WlhRdWNHNW5Mekl5TUhCNExUZ3RZMlZzYkY5dVpYUXVjRzVuLnBuZw==.png)
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWxMMlZtTDA1bGRGOXZabDkwWlhOelpYSmhZM1F1WjJsbUx6SXlNSEI0TFU1bGRGOXZabDkwWlhOelpYSmhZM1F1WjJsbS5naWY=.gif)
The tesseract is also called an 8-cell, C8, (regular) octachoron, or cubic prism. It is the four-dimensional measure polytope, taken as a unit for hypervolume. Coxeter labels it the γ4 polytope. The term hypercube without a dimension reference is frequently treated as a synonym for this specific polytope.
The Oxford English Dictionary traces the word tesseract to Charles Howard Hinton's 1888 book A New Era of Thought. The term derives from the Greek téssara (τέσσαρα 'four') and aktís (ἀκτίς 'ray'), referring to the four edges from each vertex to other vertices. Hinton originally spelled the word as tessaract.
Geometry
As a regular polytope with three cubes folded together around every edge, it has Schläfli symbol {4,3,3} with hyperoctahedral symmetry of order 384. Constructed as a 4D hyperprism made of two parallel cubes, it can be named as a composite Schläfli symbol {4,3} × { }, with symmetry order 96. As a 4-4 duoprism, a Cartesian product of two squares, it can be named by a composite Schläfli symbol {4}×{4}, with symmetry order 64. As an orthotope it can be represented by composite Schläfli symbol { } × { } × { } × { } or { }4, with symmetry order 16.
Since each vertex of a tesseract is adjacent to four edges, the vertex figure of the tesseract is a regular tetrahedron. The dual polytope of the tesseract is the 16-cell with Schläfli symbol {3,3,4}, with which it can be combined to form the compound of tesseract and 16-cell.
Each edge of a regular tesseract is of the same length. This is of interest when using tesseracts as the basis for a network topology to link multiple processors in parallel computing: the distance between two nodes is at most 4 and there are many different paths to allow weight balancing.
A tesseract is bounded by eight three-dimensional hyperplanes. Each pair of non-parallel hyperplanes intersects to form 24 square faces. Three cubes and three squares intersect at each edge. There are four cubes, six squares, and four edges meeting at every vertex. All in all, a tesseract consists of 8 cubes, 24 squares, 32 edges, and 16 vertices.
Coordinates
A unit tesseract has side length 1, and is typically taken as the basic unit for hypervolume in 4-dimensional space. The unit tesseract in a Cartesian coordinate system for 4-dimensional space has two opposite vertices at coordinates [0, 0, 0, 0] and [1, 1, 1, 1], and other vertices with coordinates at all possible combinations of 0s and 1s. It is the Cartesian product of the closed unit interval [0, 1] in each axis.
Sometimes a unit tesseract is centered at the origin, so that its coordinates are the more symmetrical This is the Cartesian product of the closed interval
in each axis.
Another commonly convenient tesseract is the Cartesian product of the closed interval [−1, 1] in each axis, with vertices at coordinates (±1, ±1, ±1, ±1). This tesseract has side length 2 and hypervolume 24 = 16.
Net
An unfolding of a polytope is called a net. There are 261 distinct nets of the tesseract. The unfoldings of the tesseract can be counted by mapping the nets to paired trees (a tree together with a perfect matching in its complement).
Construction
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWtMMlE1TDBaeWIyMWZVRzlwYm5SZmRHOWZWR1Z6YzJWeVlXTjBYeVV5T0V4dmIzQmxaRjlXWlhKemFXOXVKVEk1TG1kcFppOHlNakJ3ZUMxR2NtOXRYMUJ2YVc1MFgzUnZYMVJsYzNObGNtRmpkRjhsTWpoTWIyOXdaV1JmVm1WeWMybHZiaVV5T1M1bmFXWT0uZ2lm.gif)
The construction of hypercubes can be imagined the following way:
- 1-dimensional: Two points A and B can be connected to become a line, giving a new line segment AB.
- 2-dimensional: Two parallel line segments AB and CD separated by a distance of AB can be connected to become a square, with the corners marked as ABCD.
- 3-dimensional: Two parallel squares ABCD and EFGH separated by a distance of AB can be connected to become a cube, with the corners marked as ABCDEFGH.
- 4-dimensional: Two parallel cubes ABCDEFGH and IJKLMNOP separated by a distance of AB can be connected to become a tesseract, with the corners marked as ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP. However, this parallel positioning of two cubes such that their 8 corresponding pairs of vertices are each separated by a distance of AB can only be achieved in a space of 4 or more dimensions.
The 8 cells of the tesseract may be regarded (three different ways) as two interlocked rings of four cubes.
The tesseract can be decomposed into smaller 4-polytopes. It is the convex hull of the compound of two demitesseracts (16-cells). It can also be triangulated into 4-dimensional simplices (irregular 5-cells) that share their vertices with the tesseract. It is known that there are 92487256 such triangulations and that the fewest 4-dimensional simplices in any of them is 16.
The dissection of the tesseract into instances of its characteristic simplex (a particular orthoscheme with Coxeter diagram ) is the most basic direct construction of the tesseract possible. The characteristic 5-cell of the 4-cube is a fundamental region of the tesseract's defining symmetry group, the group which generates the B4 polytopes. The tesseract's characteristic simplex directly generates the tesseract through the actions of the group, by reflecting itself in its own bounding facets (its mirror walls).
Radial equilateral symmetry
The radius of a hypersphere circumscribed about a regular polytope is the distance from the polytope's center to one of the vertices, and for the tesseract this radius is equal to its edge length; the diameter of the sphere, the length of the diagonal between opposite vertices of the tesseract, is twice the edge length. Only a few uniform polytopes have this property, including the four-dimensional tesseract and 24-cell, the three-dimensional cuboctahedron, and the two-dimensional hexagon. In particular, the tesseract is the only hypercube (other than a zero-dimensional point) that is radially equilateral. The longest vertex-to-vertex diagonal of an -dimensional hypercube of unit edge length is
which for the square is
for the cube is
and only for the tesseract is
edge lengths.
An axis-aligned tesseract inscribed in a unit-radius 3-sphere has vertices with coordinates
Properties
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWpMMk14TDFSbGMzTmxjbUZqZEY5bmNtRndhRjl1YjI1d2JHRnVZWEpmZG1semRXRnNYM0J5YjI5bUxuTjJaeTh4TlRCd2VDMVVaWE56WlhKaFkzUmZaM0poY0doZmJtOXVjR3hoYm1GeVgzWnBjM1ZoYkY5d2NtOXZaaTV6ZG1jdWNHNW4ucG5n.png)
For a tesseract with side length s:
- Hypervolume (4D):
- Surface "volume" (3D):
- Face diagonal:
- Cell diagonal:
- 4-space diagonal:
As a configuration
This configuration matrix represents the tesseract. The rows and columns correspond to vertices, edges, faces, and cells. The diagonal numbers say how many of each element occur in the whole tesseract. The diagonal reduces to the f-vector (16,32,24,8).
The nondiagonal numbers say how many of the column's element occur in or at the row's element. For example, the 2 in the first column of the second row indicates that there are 2 vertices in (i.e., at the extremes of) each edge; the 4 in the second column of the first row indicates that 4 edges meet at each vertex.
The bottom row defines they facets, here cubes, have f-vector (8,12,6). The next row left of diagonal is ridge elements (facet of cube), here a square, (4,4).
The upper row is the f-vector of the vertex figure, here tetrahedra, (4,6,4). The next row is vertex figure ridge, here a triangle, (3,3).
Projections
It is possible to project tesseracts into three- and two-dimensional spaces, similarly to projecting a cube into two-dimensional space.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODVMemsyTDA5eWRHaHZaMjl1WVd4ZmNISnZhbVZqZEdsdmJsOWxiblpsYkc5d1pYTmZkR1Z6YzJWeVlXTjBMbkJ1Wnk4eU1qQndlQzFQY25Sb2IyZHZibUZzWDNCeWIycGxZM1JwYjI1ZlpXNTJaV3h2Y0dWelgzUmxjM05sY21GamRDNXdibWM9LnBuZw==.png)
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODVMemxpTDBoNWNHVnlZM1ZpWlc5eVpHVnlYMkpwYm1GeWVTNXpkbWN2TWpJd2NIZ3RTSGx3WlhKamRXSmxiM0prWlhKZlltbHVZWEo1TG5OMlp5NXdibWM9LnBuZw==.png)
The cell-first parallel projection of the tesseract into three-dimensional space has a cubical envelope. The nearest and farthest cells are projected onto the cube, and the remaining six cells are projected onto the six square faces of the cube.
The face-first parallel projection of the tesseract into three-dimensional space has a cuboidal envelope. Two pairs of cells project to the upper and lower halves of this envelope, and the four remaining cells project to the side faces.
The edge-first parallel projection of the tesseract into three-dimensional space has an envelope in the shape of a hexagonal prism. Six cells project onto rhombic prisms, which are laid out in the hexagonal prism in a way analogous to how the faces of the 3D cube project onto six rhombs in a hexagonal envelope under vertex-first projection. The two remaining cells project onto the prism bases.
The vertex-first parallel projection of the tesseract into three-dimensional space has a rhombic dodecahedral envelope. Two vertices of the tesseract are projected to the origin. There are exactly two ways of dissecting a rhombic dodecahedron into four congruent rhombohedra, giving a total of eight possible rhombohedra, each a projected cube of the tesseract. This projection is also the one with maximal volume. One set of projection vectors are u = (1,1,−1,−1), v = (−1,1,−1,1), w = (1,−1,−1,1).
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHhMekZoTDA5eWRHaHZaMjl1WVd4ZlZHVnpjMlZ5WVdOMFgwZHBaaTVuYVdZdk1qSXdjSGd0VDNKMGFHOW5iMjVoYkY5VVpYTnpaWEpoWTNSZlIybG1MbWRwWmc9PS5naWY=.gif)
Coxeter plane | B4 | B4 --> A3 | A3 |
---|---|---|---|
Graph | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Dihedral symmetry | [8] | [4] | [4] |
Coxeter plane | Other | B3 / D4 / A2 | B2 / D3 |
Graph | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Dihedral symmetry | [2] | [6] | [4] |
![]() A 3D projection of a tesseract performing a simple rotation about a plane in 4-dimensional space. The plane bisects the figure from front-left to back-right and top to bottom. | ![]() A 3D projection of a tesseract performing a double rotation about two orthogonal planes in 4-dimensional space. |
![]() Perspective with hidden volume elimination. The red corner is the nearest in 4D and has 4 cubical cells meeting around it. |
![]() The tetrahedron forms the convex hull of the tesseract's vertex-centered central projection. Four of 8 cubic cells are shown. The 16th vertex is projected to infinity and the four edges to it are not shown. | ![]() Stereographic projection (Edges are projected onto the 3-sphere) |
Stereoscopic 3D projection of a tesseract (parallel view) |
Stereoscopic 3D Disarmed Hypercube |
Tessellation
The tesseract, like all hypercubes, tessellates Euclidean space. The self-dual tesseractic honeycomb consisting of 4 tesseracts around each face has Schläfli symbol {4,3,3,4}. Hence, the tesseract has a dihedral angle of 90°.
The tesseract's radial equilateral symmetry makes its tessellation the unique regular body-centered cubic lattice of equal-sized spheres, in any number of dimensions.
Related polytopes and honeycombs
The tesseract is 4th in a series of hypercube:
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Line segment | Square | Cube | 4-cube | 5-cube | 6-cube | 7-cube | 8-cube | 9-cube | 10-cube |
The tesseract (8-cell) is the third in the sequence of 6 convex regular 4-polytopes (in order of size and complexity).
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 |
As a uniform duoprism, the tesseract exists in a sequence of uniform duoprisms: {p}×{4}.
The regular tesseract, along with the 16-cell, exists in a set of 15 uniform 4-polytopes with the same symmetry. The tesseract {4,3,3} exists in a sequence of regular 4-polytopes and honeycombs, {p,3,3} with tetrahedral vertex figures, {3,3}. The tesseract is also in a sequence of regular 4-polytope and honeycombs, {4,3,p} with cubic cells.
Orthogonal | Perspective |
---|---|
![]() | ![]() |
4{4}2, with 16 vertices and 8 4-edges, with the 8 4-edges shown here as 4 red and 4 blue squares |
The regular complex polytope 4{4}2, , in
has a real representation as a tesseract or 4-4 duoprism in 4-dimensional space. 4{4}2 has 16 vertices, and 8 4-edges. Its symmetry is 4[4]2, order 32. It also has a lower symmetry construction,
, or 4{}×4{}, with symmetry 4[2]4, order 16. This is the symmetry if the red and blue 4-edges are considered distinct.
In popular culture
Since their discovery, four-dimensional hypercubes have been a popular theme in art, architecture, and science fiction. Notable examples include:
- "And He Built a Crooked House", Robert Heinlein's 1940 science fiction story featuring a building in the form of a four-dimensional hypercube. This and Martin Gardner's "The No-Sided Professor", published in 1946, are among the first in science fiction to introduce readers to the Moebius band, the Klein bottle, and the hypercube (tesseract).
- Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus), a 1954 oil painting by Salvador Dalí featuring a four-dimensional hypercube unfolded into a three-dimensional Latin cross.
- The Grande Arche, a monument and building near Paris, France, completed in 1989. According to the monument's engineer, Erik Reitzel, the Grande Arche was designed to resemble the projection of a hypercube.
- Fez, a video game where one plays a character who can see beyond the two dimensions other characters can see, and must use this ability to solve platforming puzzles. Features "Dot", a tesseract who helps the player navigate the world and tells how to use abilities, fitting the theme of seeing beyond human perception of known dimensional space.
The word tesseract has been adopted for numerous other uses in popular culture, including as a plot device in works of science fiction, often with little or no connection to the four-dimensional hypercube; see Tesseract (disambiguation).
See also
- Mathematics and art
Notes
- "The Tesseract - a 4-dimensional cube". www.cut-the-knot.org. Retrieved 2020-11-09.
- Elte, E. L. (1912). The Semiregular Polytopes of the Hyperspaces. Groningen: University of Groningen. ISBN 1-4181-7968-X.
- Coxeter 1973, pp. 122–123, §7.2. illustration Fig 7.2C.
- "tesseract". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. 199669. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
- "Unfolding an 8-cell". Unfolding.apperceptual.com. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
- Coxeter 1970, p. 18.
- Pournin, Lionel (2013), "The flip-Graph of the 4-dimensional cube is connected", Discrete & Computational Geometry, 49 (3): 511–530, arXiv:1201.6543, doi:10.1007/s00454-013-9488-y, MR 3038527, S2CID 30946324
- Cottle, Richard W. (1982), "Minimal triangulation of the 4-cube", Discrete Mathematics, 40: 25–29, doi:10.1016/0012-365X(82)90185-6, MR 0676709
- Coxeter 1973, p. 12, §1.8 Configurations.
- Coxeter 1973, p. 293.
- Coxeter, H. S. M., Regular Complex Polytopes, second edition, Cambridge University Press, (1991).
- Fowler, David (2010), "Mathematics in Science Fiction: Mathematics as Science Fiction", World Literature Today, 84 (3): 48–52, doi:10.1353/wlt.2010.0188, JSTOR 27871086, S2CID 115769478
- Kemp, Martin (1 January 1998), "Dali's dimensions", Nature, 391 (27): 27, Bibcode:1998Natur.391...27K, doi:10.1038/34063, S2CID 5317132
- Ursyn, Anna (2016), "Knowledge Visualization and Visual Literacy in Science Education", Knowledge Visualization and Visual Literacy in Science Education, Information Science Reference, p. 91, ISBN 9781522504818
- "Dot (Character) - Giant Bomb". Giant Bomb. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
References
- Coxeter, H.S.M. (1973). Regular Polytopes (3rd ed.). New York: Dover. pp. 122–123.
- F. Arthur Sherk, Peter McMullen, Anthony C. Thompson, Asia Ivic Weiss (1995) Kaleidoscopes: Selected Writings of H.S.M. Coxeter, Wiley-Interscience Publication ISBN 978-0-471-01003-6 [1]
- (Paper 22) H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular and Semi Regular Polytopes I, Mathematische Zeitschrift 46 (1940) 380–407, MR 2,10]
- (Paper 23) H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular and Semi-Regular Polytopes II, [Math. Zeit. 188 (1985) 559-591]
- (Paper 24) H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular and Semi-Regular Polytopes III, [Math. Zeit. 200 (1988) 3-45]
- Coxeter, H.S.M. (1970), "Twisted Honeycombs", Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences Regional Conference Series in Mathematics, 4, Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society
- John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss (2008) The Symmetries of Things, ISBN 978-1-56881-220-5 (Chapter 26. pp. 409: Hemicubes: 1n1)
- T. Gosset (1900) On the Regular and Semi-Regular Figures in Space of n Dimensions, Messenger of Mathematics, Macmillan.
- Hall, T. Proctor (1893). "The projection of fourfold figures on a three-flat". American Journal of Mathematics. 15 (2): 179–189. doi:10.2307/2369565. JSTOR 2369565.
- Norman Johnson Uniform Polytopes, Manuscript (1991)
- N.W. Johnson: The Theory of Uniform Polytopes and Honeycombs, Ph.D. (1966)
- Victor Schlegel (1886) Ueber Projectionsmodelle der regelmässigen vier-dimensionalen Körper, Waren.
External links
- Klitzing, Richard. "4D uniform polytopes (polychora) x4o3o3o - tes".
- ken perlin's home page A way to visualize hypercubes, by Ken Perlin
- Some Notes on the Fourth Dimension includes animated tutorials on several different aspects of the tesseract, by Davide P. Cervone
- Tesseract animation with hidden volume elimination
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Line segment | Square | Cube | 4-cube | 5-cube | 6-cube | 7-cube | 8-cube | 9-cube | 10-cube |
Family | An | Bn | I2(p) / Dn | E6 / E7 / E8 / F4 / G2 | Hn | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Regular polygon | Triangle | Square | p-gon | Hexagon | Pentagon | |||||||
Uniform polyhedron | Tetrahedron | Octahedron • Cube | Demicube | Dodecahedron • Icosahedron | ||||||||
Uniform polychoron | Pentachoron | 16-cell • Tesseract | Demitesseract | 24-cell | 120-cell • 600-cell | |||||||
Uniform 5-polytope | 5-simplex | 5-orthoplex • 5-cube | 5-demicube | |||||||||
Uniform 6-polytope | 6-simplex | 6-orthoplex • 6-cube | 6-demicube | 122 • 221 | ||||||||
Uniform 7-polytope | 7-simplex | 7-orthoplex • 7-cube | 7-demicube | 132 • 231 • 321 | ||||||||
Uniform 8-polytope | 8-simplex | 8-orthoplex • 8-cube | 8-demicube | 142 • 241 • 421 | ||||||||
Uniform 9-polytope | 9-simplex | 9-orthoplex • 9-cube | 9-demicube | |||||||||
Uniform 10-polytope | 10-simplex | 10-orthoplex • 10-cube | 10-demicube | |||||||||
Uniform n-polytope | n-simplex | n-orthoplex • n-cube | n-demicube | 1k2 • 2k1 • k21 | n-pentagonal polytope | |||||||
Topics: Polytope families • Regular polytope • List of regular polytopes and compounds |
In geometry a tesseract or 4 cube is a four dimensional hypercube analogous to a two dimensional square and a three dimensional cube Just as the perimeter of the square consists of four edges and the surface of the cube consists of six square faces the hypersurface of the tesseract consists of eight cubical cells meeting at right angles The tesseract is one of the six convex regular 4 polytopes Tesseract 8 cell 4 cube TypeConvex regular 4 polytopeSchlafli symbol 4 3 3 t0 3 4 3 2 or 4 3 t0 2 4 2 4 or 4 4 t0 2 3 4 2 2 or 4 t0 1 2 3 2 2 2 or Coxeter diagramCells8 4 3 Faces24 4 Edges32Vertices16Vertex figureTetrahedronPetrie polygonoctagonCoxeter groupB4 3 3 4 Dual16 cellPropertiesconvex isogonal isotoxal isohedral Hanner polytopeUniform index10Look up tesseract in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Dali cross a net of a tesseractThe tesseract can be unfolded into eight cubes into 3D space just as the cube can be unfolded into six squares into 2D space The tesseract is also called an 8 cell C8 regular octachoron or cubic prism It is the four dimensional measure polytope taken as a unit for hypervolume Coxeter labels it the g4 polytope The term hypercube without a dimension reference is frequently treated as a synonym for this specific polytope The Oxford English Dictionary traces the word tesseract to Charles Howard Hinton s 1888 book A New Era of Thought The term derives from the Greek tessara tessara four and aktis ἀktis ray referring to the four edges from each vertex to other vertices Hinton originally spelled the word as tessaract GeometryAs a regular polytope with three cubes folded together around every edge it has Schlafli symbol 4 3 3 with hyperoctahedral symmetry of order 384 Constructed as a 4D hyperprism made of two parallel cubes it can be named as a composite Schlafli symbol 4 3 with symmetry order 96 As a 4 4 duoprism a Cartesian product of two squares it can be named by a composite Schlafli symbol 4 4 with symmetry order 64 As an orthotope it can be represented by composite Schlafli symbol or 4 with symmetry order 16 Since each vertex of a tesseract is adjacent to four edges the vertex figure of the tesseract is a regular tetrahedron The dual polytope of the tesseract is the 16 cell with Schlafli symbol 3 3 4 with which it can be combined to form the compound of tesseract and 16 cell Each edge of a regular tesseract is of the same length This is of interest when using tesseracts as the basis for a network topology to link multiple processors in parallel computing the distance between two nodes is at most 4 and there are many different paths to allow weight balancing A tesseract is bounded by eight three dimensional hyperplanes Each pair of non parallel hyperplanes intersects to form 24 square faces Three cubes and three squares intersect at each edge There are four cubes six squares and four edges meeting at every vertex All in all a tesseract consists of 8 cubes 24 squares 32 edges and 16 vertices Coordinates A unit tesseract has side length 1 and is typically taken as the basic unit for hypervolume in 4 dimensional space The unit tesseract in a Cartesian coordinate system for 4 dimensional space has two opposite vertices at coordinates 0 0 0 0 and 1 1 1 1 and other vertices with coordinates at all possible combinations of 0 s and 1 s It is the Cartesian product of the closed unit interval 0 1 in each axis Sometimes a unit tesseract is centered at the origin so that its coordinates are the more symmetrical 12 12 12 12 displaystyle bigl pm tfrac 1 2 pm tfrac 1 2 pm tfrac 1 2 pm tfrac 1 2 bigr This is the Cartesian product of the closed interval 12 12 displaystyle bigl tfrac 1 2 tfrac 1 2 bigr in each axis Another commonly convenient tesseract is the Cartesian product of the closed interval 1 1 in each axis with vertices at coordinates 1 1 1 1 This tesseract has side length 2 and hypervolume 24 16 Net An unfolding of a polytope is called a net There are 261 distinct nets of the tesseract The unfoldings of the tesseract can be counted by mapping the nets to paired trees a tree together with a perfect matching in its complement Construction An animation of the shifting in dimensions The construction of hypercubes can be imagined the following way 1 dimensional Two points A and B can be connected to become a line giving a new line segment AB 2 dimensional Two parallel line segments AB and CD separated by a distance of AB can be connected to become a square with the corners marked as ABCD 3 dimensional Two parallel squares ABCD and EFGH separated by a distance of AB can be connected to become a cube with the corners marked as ABCDEFGH 4 dimensional Two parallel cubes ABCDEFGH and IJKLMNOP separated by a distance of AB can be connected to become a tesseract with the corners marked as ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP However this parallel positioning of two cubes such that their 8 corresponding pairs of vertices are each separated by a distance of AB can only be achieved in a space of 4 or more dimensions The 8 cells of the tesseract may be regarded three different ways as two interlocked rings of four cubes The tesseract can be decomposed into smaller 4 polytopes It is the convex hull of the compound of two demitesseracts 16 cells It can also be triangulated into 4 dimensional simplices irregular 5 cells that share their vertices with the tesseract It is known that there are 92487 256 such triangulations and that the fewest 4 dimensional simplices in any of them is 16 The dissection of the tesseract into instances of its characteristic simplex a particular orthoscheme with Coxeter diagram is the most basic direct construction of the tesseract possible The characteristic 5 cell of the 4 cube is a fundamental region of the tesseract s defining symmetry group the group which generates the B4 polytopes The tesseract s characteristic simplex directly generates the tesseract through the actions of the group by reflecting itself in its own bounding facets its mirror walls Radial equilateral symmetry The radius of a hypersphere circumscribed about a regular polytope is the distance from the polytope s center to one of the vertices and for the tesseract this radius is equal to its edge length the diameter of the sphere the length of the diagonal between opposite vertices of the tesseract is twice the edge length Only a few uniform polytopes have this property including the four dimensional tesseract and 24 cell the three dimensional cuboctahedron and the two dimensional hexagon In particular the tesseract is the only hypercube other than a zero dimensional point that is radially equilateral The longest vertex to vertex diagonal of an n displaystyle n dimensional hypercube of unit edge length is nt displaystyle sqrt n vphantom t which for the square is 2 displaystyle sqrt 2 for the cube is 3 displaystyle sqrt 3 and only for the tesseract is 4 2 displaystyle sqrt 4 2 edge lengths An axis aligned tesseract inscribed in a unit radius 3 sphere has vertices with coordinates 12 12 12 12 displaystyle bigl pm tfrac 1 2 pm tfrac 1 2 pm tfrac 1 2 pm tfrac 1 2 bigr Properties Proof without words that a hypercube graph is non planar using Kuratowski s or Wagner s theorems and finding either K5 top or K3 3 bottom subgraphs For a tesseract with side length s Hypervolume 4D H s4 displaystyle H s 4 Surface volume 3D SV 8s3 displaystyle SV 8s 3 Face diagonal d2 2s displaystyle d mathrm 2 sqrt 2 s Cell diagonal d3 3s displaystyle d mathrm 3 sqrt 3 s 4 space diagonal d4 2s displaystyle d mathrm 4 2s As a configuration This configuration matrix represents the tesseract The rows and columns correspond to vertices edges faces and cells The diagonal numbers say how many of each element occur in the whole tesseract The diagonal reduces to the f vector 16 32 24 8 The nondiagonal numbers say how many of the column s element occur in or at the row s element For example the 2 in the first column of the second row indicates that there are 2 vertices in i e at the extremes of each edge the 4 in the second column of the first row indicates that 4 edges meet at each vertex The bottom row defines they facets here cubes have f vector 8 12 6 The next row left of diagonal is ridge elements facet of cube here a square 4 4 The upper row is the f vector of the vertex figure here tetrahedra 4 6 4 The next row is vertex figure ridge here a triangle 3 3 16464232334424281268 displaystyle begin bmatrix begin matrix 16 amp 4 amp 6 amp 4 2 amp 32 amp 3 amp 3 4 amp 4 amp 24 amp 2 8 amp 12 amp 6 amp 8 end matrix end bmatrix ProjectionsIt is possible to project tesseracts into three and two dimensional spaces similarly to projecting a cube into two dimensional space Parallel projection envelopes of the tesseract each cell is drawn with different color faces inverted cells are undrawn The rhombic dodecahedron forms the convex hull of the tesseract s vertex first parallel projection The number of vertices in the layers of this projection is 1 4 6 4 1 the fourth row in Pascal s triangle The cell first parallel projection of the tesseract into three dimensional space has a cubical envelope The nearest and farthest cells are projected onto the cube and the remaining six cells are projected onto the six square faces of the cube The face first parallel projection of the tesseract into three dimensional space has a cuboidal envelope Two pairs of cells project to the upper and lower halves of this envelope and the four remaining cells project to the side faces The edge first parallel projection of the tesseract into three dimensional space has an envelope in the shape of a hexagonal prism Six cells project onto rhombic prisms which are laid out in the hexagonal prism in a way analogous to how the faces of the 3D cube project onto six rhombs in a hexagonal envelope under vertex first projection The two remaining cells project onto the prism bases The vertex first parallel projection of the tesseract into three dimensional space has a rhombic dodecahedral envelope Two vertices of the tesseract are projected to the origin There are exactly two ways of dissecting a rhombic dodecahedron into four congruent rhombohedra giving a total of eight possible rhombohedra each a projected cube of the tesseract This projection is also the one with maximal volume One set of projection vectors are u 1 1 1 1 v 1 1 1 1 w 1 1 1 1 Animation showing each individual cube within the B4 Coxeter plane projection of the tesseractOrthographic projections Coxeter plane B4 B4 gt A3 A3GraphDihedral symmetry 8 4 4 Coxeter plane Other B3 D4 A2 B2 D3GraphDihedral symmetry 2 6 4 Orthographic projection Coxeter plane B4 graph with hidden lines as dash lines and the tesseract without hidden lines A 3D projection of a tesseract performing a simple rotation about a plane in 4 dimensional space The plane bisects the figure from front left to back right and top to bottom A 3D projection of a tesseract performing a double rotation about two orthogonal planes in 4 dimensional space source source source source source source source source 3D Projection of three tesseracts with and without faces Perspective with hidden volume elimination The red corner is the nearest in 4D and has 4 cubical cells meeting around it The tetrahedron forms the convex hull of the tesseract s vertex centered central projection Four of 8 cubic cells are shown The 16th vertex is projected to infinity and the four edges to it are not shown Stereographic projection Edges are projected onto the 3 sphere Stereoscopic 3D projection of a tesseract parallel view Stereoscopic 3D Disarmed HypercubeTessellationThe tesseract like all hypercubes tessellates Euclidean space The self dual tesseractic honeycomb consisting of 4 tesseracts around each face has Schlafli symbol 4 3 3 4 Hence the tesseract has a dihedral angle of 90 The tesseract s radial equilateral symmetry makes its tessellation the unique regular body centered cubic lattice of equal sized spheres in any number of dimensions Related polytopes and honeycombsThe tesseract is 4th in a series of hypercube Petrie polygon orthographic projections Line segment Square Cube 4 cube 5 cube 6 cube 7 cube 8 cube 9 cube 10 cube The tesseract 8 cell is the third in the sequence of 6 convex regular 4 polytopes in order of size and complexity Regular convex 4 polytopesSymmetry group A4 B4 F4 H4Name 5 cell Hyper tetrahedron 5 point 16 cell Hyper octahedron 8 point 8 cell Hyper cube 16 point 24 cell 24 point 600 cell Hyper icosahedron 120 point 120 cell Hyper dodecahedron 600 pointSchlafli symbol 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 5 5 3 3 Coxeter mirrorsMirror 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 GraphVertices 5 tetrahedral 8 octahedral 16 tetrahedral 24 cubical 120 icosahedral 600 tetrahedralEdges 10 triangular 24 square 32 triangular 96 triangular 720 pentagonal 1200 triangularFaces 10 triangles 32 triangles 24 squares 96 triangles 1200 triangles 720 pentagonsCells 5 tetrahedra 16 tetrahedra 8 cubes 24 octahedra 600 tetrahedra 120 dodecahedraTori 1 5 tetrahedron 2 8 tetrahedron 2 4 cube 4 6 octahedron 20 30 tetrahedron 12 10 dodecahedronInscribed 120 in 120 cell 675 in 120 cell 2 16 cells 3 8 cells 25 24 cells 10 600 cellsGreat polygons 2 squares x 3 4 rectangles x 4 4 hexagons x 4 12 decagons x 6 100 irregular hexagons x 4Petrie 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 4Long radius 1 displaystyle 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 displaystyle 1 1 displaystyle 1 Edge length 52 1 581 displaystyle sqrt tfrac 5 2 approx 1 581 2 1 414 displaystyle sqrt 2 approx 1 414 1 displaystyle 1 1 displaystyle 1 1ϕ 0 618 displaystyle tfrac 1 phi approx 0 618 1ϕ22 0 270 displaystyle tfrac 1 phi 2 sqrt 2 approx 0 270 Short radius 14 displaystyle tfrac 1 4 12 displaystyle tfrac 1 2 12 displaystyle tfrac 1 2 12 0 707 displaystyle sqrt tfrac 1 2 approx 0 707 ϕ48 0 926 displaystyle sqrt tfrac phi 4 8 approx 0 926 ϕ48 0 926 displaystyle sqrt tfrac phi 4 8 approx 0 926 Area 10 538 10 825 displaystyle 10 left tfrac 5 sqrt 3 8 right approx 10 825 32 34 27 713 displaystyle 32 left sqrt tfrac 3 4 right approx 27 713 24 displaystyle 24 96 316 41 569 displaystyle 96 left sqrt tfrac 3 16 right approx 41 569 1200 34ϕ2 198 48 displaystyle 1200 left tfrac sqrt 3 4 phi 2 right approx 198 48 720 25 1058ϕ4 90 366 displaystyle 720 left tfrac sqrt 25 10 sqrt 5 8 phi 4 right approx 90 366 Volume 5 5524 2 329 displaystyle 5 left tfrac 5 sqrt 5 24 right approx 2 329 16 13 5 333 displaystyle 16 left tfrac 1 3 right approx 5 333 8 displaystyle 8 24 23 11 314 displaystyle 24 left tfrac sqrt 2 3 right approx 11 314 600 212ϕ3 16 693 displaystyle 600 left tfrac sqrt 2 12 phi 3 right approx 16 693 120 15 754ϕ68 18 118 displaystyle 120 left tfrac 15 7 sqrt 5 4 phi 6 sqrt 8 right approx 18 118 4 Content 524 52 4 0 146 displaystyle tfrac sqrt 5 24 left tfrac sqrt 5 2 right 4 approx 0 146 23 0 667 displaystyle tfrac 2 3 approx 0 667 1 displaystyle 1 2 displaystyle 2 Short Vol4 3 863 displaystyle tfrac text Short times text Vol 4 approx 3 863 Short Vol4 4 193 displaystyle tfrac text Short times text Vol 4 approx 4 193 As a uniform duoprism the tesseract exists in a sequence of uniform duoprisms p 4 The regular tesseract along with the 16 cell exists in a set of 15 uniform 4 polytopes with the same symmetry The tesseract 4 3 3 exists in a sequence of regular 4 polytopes and honeycombs p 3 3 with tetrahedral vertex figures 3 3 The tesseract is also in a sequence of regular 4 polytope and honeycombs 4 3 p with cubic cells Orthogonal Perspective4 4 2 with 16 vertices and 8 4 edges with the 8 4 edges shown here as 4 red and 4 blue squares The regular complex polytope 4 4 2 in C2 displaystyle mathbb C 2 has a real representation as a tesseract or 4 4 duoprism in 4 dimensional space 4 4 2 has 16 vertices and 8 4 edges Its symmetry is 4 4 2 order 32 It also has a lower symmetry construction or 4 4 with symmetry 4 2 4 order 16 This is the symmetry if the red and blue 4 edges are considered distinct In popular cultureSince their discovery four dimensional hypercubes have been a popular theme in art architecture and science fiction Notable examples include And He Built a Crooked House Robert Heinlein s 1940 science fiction story featuring a building in the form of a four dimensional hypercube This and Martin Gardner s The No Sided Professor published in 1946 are among the first in science fiction to introduce readers to the Moebius band the Klein bottle and the hypercube tesseract Crucifixion Corpus Hypercubus a 1954 oil painting by Salvador Dali featuring a four dimensional hypercube unfolded into a three dimensional Latin cross The Grande Arche a monument and building near Paris France completed in 1989 According to the monument s engineer Erik Reitzel the Grande Arche was designed to resemble the projection of a hypercube Fez a video game where one plays a character who can see beyond the two dimensions other characters can see and must use this ability to solve platforming puzzles Features Dot a tesseract who helps the player navigate the world and tells how to use abilities fitting the theme of seeing beyond human perception of known dimensional space The word tesseract has been adopted for numerous other uses in popular culture including as a plot device in works of science fiction often with little or no connection to the four dimensional hypercube see Tesseract disambiguation See alsoMathematics and artNotes The Tesseract a 4 dimensional cube www cut the knot org Retrieved 2020 11 09 Elte E L 1912 The Semiregular Polytopes of the Hyperspaces Groningen University of Groningen ISBN 1 4181 7968 X Coxeter 1973 pp 122 123 7 2 illustration Fig 7 2C tesseract Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press 199669 Subscription or participating institution membership required Unfolding an 8 cell Unfolding apperceptual com Retrieved 21 January 2018 Coxeter 1970 p 18 Pournin Lionel 2013 The flip Graph of the 4 dimensional cube is connected Discrete amp Computational Geometry 49 3 511 530 arXiv 1201 6543 doi 10 1007 s00454 013 9488 y MR 3038527 S2CID 30946324 Cottle Richard W 1982 Minimal triangulation of the 4 cube Discrete Mathematics 40 25 29 doi 10 1016 0012 365X 82 90185 6 MR 0676709 Coxeter 1973 p 12 1 8 Configurations Coxeter 1973 p 293 Coxeter H S M Regular Complex Polytopes second edition Cambridge University Press 1991 Fowler David 2010 Mathematics in Science Fiction Mathematics as Science Fiction World Literature Today 84 3 48 52 doi 10 1353 wlt 2010 0188 JSTOR 27871086 S2CID 115769478 Kemp Martin 1 January 1998 Dali s dimensions Nature 391 27 27 Bibcode 1998Natur 391 27K doi 10 1038 34063 S2CID 5317132 Ursyn Anna 2016 Knowledge Visualization and Visual Literacy in Science Education Knowledge Visualization and Visual Literacy in Science Education Information Science Reference p 91 ISBN 9781522504818 Dot Character Giant Bomb Giant Bomb Retrieved 21 January 2018 ReferencesCoxeter H S M 1973 Regular Polytopes 3rd ed New York Dover pp 122 123 F Arthur Sherk Peter McMullen Anthony C Thompson Asia Ivic Weiss 1995 Kaleidoscopes Selected Writings of H S M Coxeter Wiley Interscience Publication ISBN 978 0 471 01003 6 1 Paper 22 H S M Coxeter Regular and Semi Regular Polytopes I Mathematische Zeitschrift 46 1940 380 407 MR 2 10 Paper 23 H S M Coxeter Regular and Semi Regular Polytopes II Math Zeit 188 1985 559 591 Paper 24 H S M Coxeter Regular and Semi Regular Polytopes III Math Zeit 200 1988 3 45 Coxeter H S M 1970 Twisted Honeycombs Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences Regional Conference Series in Mathematics 4 Providence Rhode Island American Mathematical Society John H Conway Heidi Burgiel Chaim Goodman Strauss 2008 The Symmetries of Things ISBN 978 1 56881 220 5 Chapter 26 pp 409 Hemicubes 1n1 T Gosset 1900 On the Regular and Semi Regular Figures in Space of n Dimensions Messenger of Mathematics Macmillan Hall T Proctor 1893 The projection of fourfold figures on a three flat American Journal of Mathematics 15 2 179 189 doi 10 2307 2369565 JSTOR 2369565 Norman Johnson Uniform Polytopes Manuscript 1991 N W Johnson The Theory of Uniform Polytopes and Honeycombs Ph D 1966 Victor Schlegel 1886 Ueber Projectionsmodelle der regelmassigen vier dimensionalen Korper Waren External linksKlitzing Richard 4D uniform polytopes polychora x4o3o3o tes ken perlin s home page A way to visualize hypercubes by Ken Perlin Some Notes on the Fourth Dimension includes animated tutorials on several different aspects of the tesseract by Davide P Cervone Tesseract animation with hidden volume eliminationPetrie polygon orthographic projections Line segment Square Cube 4 cube 5 cube 6 cube 7 cube 8 cube 9 cube 10 cube vteFundamental convex regular and uniform polytopes in dimensions 2 10Family An Bn I2 p Dn E6 E7 E8 F4 G2 HnRegular polygon Triangle Square p gon Hexagon PentagonUniform polyhedron Tetrahedron Octahedron Cube Demicube Dodecahedron IcosahedronUniform polychoron Pentachoron 16 cell Tesseract Demitesseract 24 cell 120 cell 600 cellUniform 5 polytope 5 simplex 5 orthoplex 5 cube 5 demicubeUniform 6 polytope 6 simplex 6 orthoplex 6 cube 6 demicube 122 221Uniform 7 polytope 7 simplex 7 orthoplex 7 cube 7 demicube 132 231 321Uniform 8 polytope 8 simplex 8 orthoplex 8 cube 8 demicube 142 241 421Uniform 9 polytope 9 simplex 9 orthoplex 9 cube 9 demicubeUniform 10 polytope 10 simplex 10 orthoplex 10 cube 10 demicubeUniform n polytope n simplex n orthoplex n cube n demicube 1k2 2k1 k21 n pentagonal polytopeTopics Polytope families Regular polytope List of regular polytopes and compounds