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Small cubicuboctahedron

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Small cubicuboctahedron
Type Uniform star polyhedron
Elements F = 20, E = 48
V = 24 (χ = −4)
Faces by sides 8{3}+6{4}+6{8}
Coxeter diagram
Wythoff symbol 3/2 4 | 4
3 4/3 | 4
Symmetry group Oh, [4,3], *432
Index references U13, C38, W69
Dual polyhedron Small hexacronic icositetrahedron
Vertex figure
4.8.3/2.8
Bowers acronym Socco

In geometry, the small cubicuboctahedron is a uniform star polyhedron, indexed as U13. It has 20 faces (8 triangles, 6 squares, and 6 octagons), 48 edges, and 24 vertices. Its vertex figure is a crossed quadrilateral.

It shares the vertex arrangement with the stellated truncated hexahedron. It additionally shares its edge arrangement with the rhombicuboctahedron (having the triangular faces and 6 square faces in common), and with the small rhombihexahedron (having the octagonal faces in common).


Rhombicuboctahedron

Small cubicuboctahedron

Small rhombihexahedron

Stellated truncated hexahedron
The t0,1{4, 4, 3} tiling is the tiling on the universal cover of the small cubicuboctahedron.
(Yellow and red reversed in this tiling, compared to polyhedron.)

As the Euler characteristic suggests, the small cubicuboctahedron is a toroidal polyhedron of genus 3 (topologically it is a surface of genus 3), and thus can be interpreted as a (polyhedral) immersion of a genus 3 polyhedral surface. Stated alternatively, it corresponds to a uniform tiling of this surface. In the language of abstract polytopes, the small cubicuboctahedron is a faithful realization of this abstract toroidal polyhedron, meaning that it is a nondegenerate polyhedron and that they have the same symmetry group – every automorphism of the abstract genus 3 surface with this tiling is realized by an isometry of Euclidean space (it is a uniform tiling, and the small cubicuboctahedron is a uniform polyhedron).

Higher genus surfaces (genus 2 or greater) admit a metric of negative constant curvature (by the uniformization theorem), and the universal cover of the resulting Riemann surface is the hyperbolic plane. The corresponding tiling of the hyperbolic plane has vertex figure 3.8.4.8 (triangle, octagon, square, octagon) – the covering map is a local isometry and thus the abstract vertex figure is the same (disregarding the factor of ½ which described not how faces are abstractly arranged about a vertex, but how they are concretely realized in Euclidean 3-space). This tiling may be denoted by the Wythoff symbol 3 4 | 4, and is depicted at right.

The small cubicuboctahedron can also be interpreted as a polyhedral immersion (a coloring of) the Klein quartic,[1] which is a quotient of the order-7 triangular tiling.

Alternatively and more subtly, the small cubicuboctahedron can be interpreted as a coloring of the regular (not just uniform) tiling of the genus 3 surface by 20 equilateral triangles, meeting at 24 vertices, each with degree 7.[1] This regular tiling is significant as it is a tiling of the Klein quartic, the genus 3 surface with the most symmetric metric (automorphisms of this tiling equal isometries of the surface), and the automorphism group of this surface is isomorphic to the projective special linear group PSL(2,7), equivalently GL(3,2) (order 168, orientation-preserving isometries). Note that the small cubicuboctahedron is not a realization of this abstract polyhedron, as it only have 24 orientation-preserving symmetries (not every abstract automorphism is realized by a Euclidean isometry) – the isometries of the small cubicuboctahedron preserve not only the triangular tiling, but also the coloring, and hence are a proper subgroup of the full isometry group.

The corresponding tiling of the hyperbolic plane (the universal covering) is the order-7 triangular tiling. The automorphism group of the Klein quartic can be augmented (by a symmetry which is not realized by a symmetry of the polyhedron, namely "exchanging the two endpoints of the edges that bisect the squares and octahedra) to yield the Mathieu group M24.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b (Richter) Note each face in the polyhedron consist of multiple faces in the tiling, hence the description as a "coloring" – two triangular faces constitute a square face and so forth, as per this explanatory image.
  2. ^ (Richter)
  • Richter, David A., How to Make the Mathieu Group M24, retrieved 2010-04-15{{citation}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)