Compound Of Three Octahedra
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In mathematics, the compound of three octahedra or octahedron 3-compound is a
polyhedral compound In geometry, a polyhedral compound is a figure that is composed of several polyhedra sharing a common centre. They are the three-dimensional analogs of polygonal compounds such as the hexagram. The outer vertices of a compound can be connected ...
formed from three regular octahedra, all sharing a common center but rotated with respect to each other. Although appearing earlier in the mathematical literature, it was rediscovered and popularized by
M. C. Escher Maurits Cornelis Escher (; 17 June 1898 – 27 March 1972) was a Dutch graphic artist who made mathematically inspired woodcuts, lithographs, and mezzotints. Despite wide popular interest, Escher was for most of his life neglected in t ...
, who used it in the central image of his 1948 woodcut ''
Stars A star is an astronomical object comprising a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by its gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked eye at night, but their immense distances from Earth ma ...
''.


Construction

A regular octahedron can be circumscribed around a cube in such a way that the eight edges of two opposite squares of the cube lie on the eight faces of the octahedron. The three octahedra formed in this way from the three pairs of opposite cube squares form the compound of three octahedra.. The eight cube vertices are the same as the eight points in the compound where three edges cross each other. Each of the octahedron edges that participates in these triple crossings is divided by the crossing point in the ratio 1: . The remaining octahedron edges cross each other in pairs, within the interior of the compound; their crossings are at their midpoints and form right angles. The compound of three octahedra can also be formed from three copies of a single octahedron by rotating each copy by an angle of /4 around one of the three symmetry axes that pass through two opposite vertices of the starting octahedron.. A third construction for the same compound of three octahedra is as the
dual polyhedron In geometry, every polyhedron is associated with a second dual structure, where the vertices of one correspond to the faces of the other, and the edges between pairs of vertices of one correspond to the edges between pairs of faces of the other. ...
of the
compound of three cubes In geometry, the compound of three cubes is a uniform polyhedron compound formed from three cubes arranged with octahedral symmetry. It has been depicted in works by Max Brückner and M.C. Escher. History This compound appears in Max Brückner's ...
, one of the
uniform polyhedron compound In geometry, a uniform polyhedron compound is a polyhedral compound whose constituents are identical (although possibly enantiomorphous) uniform polyhedra, in an arrangement that is also uniform, i.e. the symmetry group of the compound acts tran ...
s. The six vertices of one of the three octahedra may be given by the coordinates and . The other two octahedra have coordinates that may be obtained from these coordinates by exchanging the ''z'' coordinate for the ''x'' or ''y'' coordinate.


Symmetries

The compound of three octahedra has the same
symmetry group In group theory, the symmetry group of a geometric object is the group of all transformations under which the object is invariant, endowed with the group operation of composition. Such a transformation is an invertible mapping of the ambient ...
as a single octahedron. It is an
isohedral In geometry, a tessellation of dimension (a plane tiling) or higher, or a polytope of dimension (a polyhedron) or higher, is isohedral or face-transitive if all its faces are the same. More specifically, all faces must be not merely congruent ...
deltahedron In geometry, a deltahedron (plural ''deltahedra'') is a polyhedron whose face (geometry), faces are all equilateral triangles. The name is taken from the Greek language, Greek upper case delta (letter), delta (Δ), which has the shape of an equ ...
, meaning that its faces are equilateral triangles and that it has a symmetry taking every face to every other face. There is one known infinite family of isohedral deltahedra, and 36 more that do not fall into this family; the compound of three octahedra is one of the 36 sporadic examples.. However, its symmetry group does not take every vertex to every other vertex, so it is not itself a uniform polyhedron compound. The intersection of the three octahedra is a
convex polyhedron A convex polytope is a special case of a polytope, having the additional property that it is also a convex set contained in the n-dimensional Euclidean space \mathbb^n. Most texts. use the term "polytope" for a bounded convex polytope, and the wo ...
with 14 vertices and 24 faces, a tetrakis hexahedron, formed by attaching a low
square pyramid In geometry, a square pyramid is a pyramid having a square base. If the apex is perpendicularly above the center of the square, it is a right square pyramid, and has symmetry. If all edge lengths are equal, it is an equilateral square pyramid, ...
to each face of the central cube. Thus, the compound can be seen as a
stellation In geometry, stellation is the process of extending a polygon in two dimensions, polyhedron in three dimensions, or, in general, a polytope in ''n'' dimensions to form a new figure. Starting with an original figure, the process extends specific el ...
of the tetrakis hexahedron. A different form of the tetrakis hexahedron, formed by using taller pyramids on each face of the cube, is non-convex but has equilateral triangle faces that again lie on the same planes as the faces of the three octahedra; it is another of the known isohedral deltahedra. A third isohedral deltahedron sharing the same face planes, the
compound of six tetrahedra The compound of six tetrahedra is a uniform polyhedron compound. It's composed of a symmetric arrangement of 6 tetrahedra. It can be constructed by inscribing a stella octangula within each cube in the compound of three cubes, or by stellating e ...
, may be formed by stellating each face of the compound of three octahedra to form three stellae octangulae. A fourth isohedral deltahedron with the same face planes, also a stellation of the compound of three octahedra, has the same combinatorial structure as the tetrakis hexahedron but with the cube faces dented inwards into intersecting pyramids rather than attaching the pyramids to the exterior of the cube. The cube around which the three octahedra can be circumscribed has nine planes of
reflection symmetry In mathematics, reflection symmetry, line symmetry, mirror symmetry, or mirror-image symmetry is symmetry with respect to a reflection. That is, a figure which does not change upon undergoing a reflection has reflectional symmetry. In 2D ther ...
. Three of these reflection panes pass parallel to the sides of the cube, halfway between two opposite sides; the other six pass diagonally across the cube, through four of its vertices. These nine planes coincide with the nine equatorial planes of the three octahedra.


History

In the 15th-century manuscript ''
De quinque corporibus regularibus ''De quinque corporibus regularibus'' (sometimes called ''Libellus de quinque corporibus regularibus'') is a book on the geometry of polyhedra written in the 1480s or early 1490s by Italian painter and mathematician Piero della Francesca. It is ...
'' by
Piero della Francesca Piero della Francesca (, also , ; – 12 October 1492), originally named Piero di Benedetto, was an Italian painter of the Early Renaissance. To contemporaries he was also known as a mathematician and geometer. Nowadays Piero della Francesca i ...
, della Francesca already includes a drawing of an octahedron circumscribed around a cube, with eight of the cube edges lying in the octahedron's eight faces. Three octahedra circumscribed in this way around a single cube would form the compound of three octahedra, but della Francesca does not depict the compound. The next appearance of the compound of three octahedra in the mathematical literature appears to be a 1900 work by
Max Brückner Johannes Max Brückner (5 August 1860 – 1 November 1934) was a German geometer, known for his collection of polyhedral models. Education and career Brückner was born in Hartau, in the Kingdom of Saxony, a town that is now part of Zittau, ...
, which mentions it and includes a photograph of a model of it.. The discussion of the compound of three octahedra is on pp. 61–62. Dutch artist
M. C. Escher Maurits Cornelis Escher (; 17 June 1898 – 27 March 1972) was a Dutch graphic artist who made mathematically inspired woodcuts, lithographs, and mezzotints. Despite wide popular interest, Escher was for most of his life neglected in t ...
, in his 1948 woodcut ''
Stars A star is an astronomical object comprising a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by its gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked eye at night, but their immense distances from Earth ma ...
'', used as the central figure of the woodcut a cage in this shape, containing two
chameleon Chameleons or chamaeleons (family Chamaeleonidae) are a distinctive and highly specialized clade of Old World lizards with 202 species described as of June 2015. The members of this family are best known for their distinct range of colors, bein ...
s and floating through space.
H. S. M. Coxeter Harold Scott MacDonald "Donald" Coxeter, (9 February 1907 – 31 March 2003) was a British and later also Canadian geometer. He is regarded as one of the greatest geometers of the 20th century. Biography Coxeter was born in Kensington t ...
, assuming that Escher rediscovered this shape independently, writes that "It is remarkable that Escher, without any knowledge of algebra or analytic geometry, was able to rediscover this highly symmetrical figure." However,
George W. Hart George William Hart (born 1955) is an American sculptor and geometer. Before retiring, he was an associate professor of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University in New York City and then an interdepartmental research professor at Stony Bro ...
has documented that Escher was familiar with Brückner's work and used it as the basis for many of the stellated polyhedra and polyhedral compounds that he drew. Earlier in 1948, Escher had made a preliminary woodcut with a similar theme, ''Study for Stars'', but instead of using the compound of three regular octahedra in the study he used a different but related shape, a
stellated rhombic dodecahedron In geometry, the first stellation of the rhombic dodecahedron is a self-intersecting polyhedron with 12 faces, each of which is a non-convex hexagon. It is a stellation of the rhombic dodecahedron and has the same outer shell and the same visual ...
(sometimes called Escher's solid), which can be formed as a compound of three flattened octahedra.The compound of three octahedra and a remarkable compound of three square dipyramids, the Escher's solid
Livio Zefiro, University of Genova.
This form as a polyhedron is topologically identical to the
disdyakis dodecahedron In geometry, a disdyakis dodecahedron, (also hexoctahedron, hexakis octahedron, octakis cube, octakis hexahedron, kisrhombic dodecahedron), is a Catalan solid with 48 faces and the dual to the Archimedean truncated cuboctahedron. As such it is fa ...
, which can be seen as rhombic dodecahedron with shorter pyramids on the rhombic faces. The dual figure of the octahedral compound, the compound of three cubes, is also shown in a later Escher woodcut, ''
Waterfall A waterfall is a point in a river or stream where water flows over a vertical drop or a series of steep drops. Waterfalls also occur where meltwater drops over the edge of a tabular iceberg or ice shelf. Waterfalls can be formed in several wa ...
'', next to the same stellated rhombic dodecahedron.. The compound of three octahedra re-entered the mathematical literature more properly with the work of , who observed its existence and provided coordinates for its vertices. It was studied in more detail by and .


Other compounds of three octahedra

With the octahedra seen as
triangular antiprism In geometry, an octahedron (plural: octahedra, octahedrons) is a polyhedron with eight faces. The term is most commonly used to refer to the regular octahedron, a Platonic solid composed of eight equilateral triangles, four of which meet at ea ...
s, another uniform prismatic compound of antiprisms exists with D3d symmetry, order 12. Each antiprism is rotated 40 degrees. The top and bottom planes can be seen to contain the compound
enneagram Enneagram is a compound word derived from the Greek neoclassical stems for "nine" (''ennea'') and something "written" or "drawn" (''gramma''). Enneagram may refer to: * Enneagram (geometry), a nine-sided star polygon with various configurations ...
, or 3. :


See also

*
Compound of four octahedra The compound of four octahedra is a uniform polyhedron compound. It's composed of a symmetric arrangement of 4 octahedron, octahedra, considered as triangular antiprisms. It can be constructed by superimposing four identical octahedra, and then r ...
*
Compound of five octahedra The compound of five octahedra is one of the five regular polyhedron compounds. This polyhedron can be seen as either a polyhedral stellation or a compound. This compound was first described by Edmund Hess in 1876. It is unique among the regular ...
* Compound of ten octahedra *
Compound of twenty octahedra The compound of twenty octahedra is a uniform polyhedron compound. It's composed of a symmetric arrangement of 20 octahedra (considered as triangular antiprisms). It is a special case of the compound of 20 octahedra with rotational freedom, in ...


References


External links

*{{mathworld, title=Octahedron 3-Compound, urlname=Octahedron3-Compound, mode=cs2 Polyhedral compounds