Dual polyhedron
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
In geometry, every polyhedron has a special partner called its dual. This means the points, or vertices, of one shape match the flat surfaces, or faces, of the other. The lines connecting points, or edges, also match up.
An interesting fact is that if you take the dual of a dual shape, you get back the original shape. This helps us see how shapes are connected. Duality keeps the symmetries of a shape the same.
For example, the Platonic solids, like the tetrahedron, cube, and dodecahedron, each have matching dual shapes. The regular tetrahedron is its own dual, which is special. This idea helps mathematicians and scientists study geometric shapes.
Kinds of duality
There are different ways to think about dual polyhedra. One important way is called polar reciprocation. This method uses a sphere to create a dual polyhedron. Each point (vertex) in the original shape matches a flat surface (face) in the dual, and each flat surface in the original matches a point in the dual.
Another way is topological duality. Even if two shapes can't be made from each other using a sphere, they can still be duals if their points, lines, and flat surfaces match up in a specific way. This idea works for many kinds of shapes, even ones that are not perfectly symmetrical.
Self-dual polyhedra
A polyhedron is called self-dual if its dual looks exactly the same. This means the points, lines, and surfaces connect in the same way. For example, the dual of a regular tetrahedron is another regular tetrahedron. Flat shapes, like a pentagon or a hexagon, are also self-dual because they have the same number of points as lines.
There are many self-dual polyhedra. Simple examples include pyramids, where a base shape has a point above it. Other shapes can be made by stacking pyramids on top of prisms. In 1900, a special self-dual shape with hexagonal sides was discovered. Some self-dual shapes switch points and surfaces in interesting ways.
Main article: Hasse diagram
Main articles: regular form, canonical polyhedron, midsphere, elongated pyramids, prism, permutation, involution
Dual polytopes and tessellations
In geometry, the idea of a dual can be used in spaces with more dimensions, called dual polytopes. In two dimensions, these are known as dual polygons.
One polytope’s points match the higher-dimensional faces of another, and their lines connect in a matching way. For example, in four dimensions, the 600-cell has a shape called an icosahedron at each point; its dual, the 120-cell, has dodecahedra in the corresponding places, which are the dual shapes of icosahedra.
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