Truncated cuboctahedron
Adapted from Wikipedia · Discoverer experience
In geometry, the truncated cuboctahedron or great rhombicuboctahedron is a special shape known as an Archimedean solid. It was named by the astronomer Kepler as a kind of truncation of another shape called a cuboctahedron. This interesting solid has 12 flat square faces, 8 perfectly shaped hexagonal faces, and 6 regular octagonal faces. All together, it has 48 points where the faces meet, called vertices, and 72 lines where the faces connect, called edges.
One special feature of the truncated cuboctahedron is that each of its faces has a kind of balance called point symmetry. This means that if you turn the face halfway around, it still looks the same. Because of this, the shape is also called a 9-zonohedron.
The truncated cuboctahedron can fit together with other shapes in a pattern that covers space without gaps. It can tessellate with shapes known as octagonal prisms, making beautiful and repeating designs. This shape is important in the study of geometry and helps us understand how different faces can come together in three dimensions.
Names
There is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron with a similar name: the nonconvex great rhombicuboctahedron.
The name truncated cuboctahedron, given originally by Johannes Kepler, is misleading: an actual truncation of a cuboctahedron has rectangles instead of squares; however, this nonuniform polyhedron is topologically equivalent to the Archimedean solid unrigorously named truncated cuboctahedron. Alternate interchangeable names are: Truncated cuboctahedron (Johannes Kepler), Rhombitruncated cuboctahedron (Magnus Wenninger), Great rhombicuboctahedron (Robert Williams), Great rhombcuboctahedron (Peter Cromwell), Omnitruncated cube or cantitruncated cube (Norman Johnson), Beveled cube (Conway polyhedron notation). | Cuboctahedron and its truncation |
Cartesian coordinates
The Cartesian coordinates for the vertices of a truncated cuboctahedron with edge length 2 and centered at the origin are all the permutations of (±1, ±(1 + √2), ±(1 + 2√2)). This means you can arrange the numbers in different orders and change their signs to find all the points where the vertices are located.
Area and volume
The area and volume of a truncated cuboctahedron can be calculated if we know the length of its edges, called a. The area A is about 61.76 times a squared, and the volume V is about 41.80 times a cubed. These formulas help us understand the size of this special shape.
Dissection
The truncated cuboctahedron can be thought of as a rhombicuboctahedron with extra shapes added to it. Imagine placing small cubes on top of the 12 square faces of a rhombicuboctahedron. The spaces around it can also be filled with 6 square cupolas and 8 triangular cupolas.
If we take away the central rhombicuboctahedron and some of these added shapes, we can make interesting ring-like shapes called Stewart toroids. For example, removing the 6 square cupolas creates a toroid, and removing 8 triangular cupolas creates another type of toroid. By choosing which shapes to remove, we can create many different kinds of these ring-like forms.
Uniform colorings
There is only one uniform coloring of the truncated cuboctahedron, where each face type has its own color. However, a 2-uniform coloring exists, featuring alternating colors on the hexagonal faces due to tetrahedral symmetry.
Orthogonal projections
The truncated cuboctahedron has two special orthogonal projections in the A2 and B2 Coxeter planes. These projections show the shape from certain angles and help us understand its symmetry. There are also many other ways to look at the shape that show different parts of its structure.
| Centered by | Vertex | Edge 4-6 | Edge 4-8 | Edge 6-8 | Face normal 4-6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Image | |||||
| Projective symmetry | + | ||||
| Centered by | Face normal Square | Face normal Octagon | Face Square | Face Hexagon | Face Octagon |
| Image | |||||
| Projective symmetry |
Spherical tiling
The truncated cuboctahedron can be shown as a pattern on a sphere, called a spherical tiling, and then drawn on a flat surface using a special method called stereographic projection. This method keeps the angles the same but changes the sizes and lengths. On the flat drawing, lines that would be straight on the sphere appear as curved arcs.
| Orthogonal projection | square-centered | hexagon-centered | octagon-centered |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stereographic projections | |||
Full octahedral group
The truncated cuboctahedron has a special kind of symmetry called full octahedral symmetry. It has 48 vertices, which match the elements of this symmetry group. Each face of its dual shape is a basic area of this group.
The edges of the solid match 9 reflections in the group. For example, edges between octagons and squares match 3 reflections between opposite octagons, and hexagon edges match 6 reflections between opposite squares. Some smaller symmetry groups match parts of the truncated cuboctahedron’s vertices.
| Subgroups and corresponding solids | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Truncated cuboctahedron tr{4,3} | Snub cube sr{4,3} | Rhombicuboctahedron s2{3,4} | Truncated octahedron h1,2{4,3} | Icosahedron |
| [4,3] Full octahedral | [4,3]+ Chiral octahedral | [4,3+] Pyritohedral | [1+,4,3] = [3,3] Full tetrahedral | [1+,4,3+] = [3,3]+ Chiral tetrahedral |
| all 48 vertices | 24 vertices | 12 vertices | ||
Related polyhedra
The truncated cuboctahedron belongs to a group of shapes connected to the cube and regular octahedron. It is part of a pattern where each shape has a specific arrangement of corners, shown by a special diagram. For numbers smaller than six, these shapes can be drawn as patterns on a sphere or even on curved surfaces. The truncated cuboctahedron is the first in a line of shapes made from hypercubes.
Main article: Vertex configuration
Main articles: Omnitruncated polyhedra, Zonohedrons
Further information: Truncated triheptagonal tiling
| Bowtie tetrahedron and cube contain two trapezoidal faces in place of each square. | |
Truncated cuboctahedral graph
In the field of graph theory, the truncated cuboctahedral graph is the graph that shows the points and lines connecting in a special 3D shape called the truncated cuboctahedron. This shape is one of the Archimedean solids.
The graph has 48 points where lines meet and 72 lines connecting these points. It is special because it has a certain kind of symmetry and is linked to the study of three-dimensional shapes.
Images
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