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Similarly, a k-isohedral tiling has k separate symmetry orbits (it may contain m different face shapes, for m = k, or only for some m < k). [ 6 ] ("1-isohedral" is the same as "isohedral".) A monohedral polyhedron or monohedral tiling ( m = 1) has congruent faces, either directly or reflectively, which occur in one or more symmetry positions.
Convex regular icosahedron A tensegrity icosahedron. In geometry, an icosahedron (/ ˌ aɪ k ɒ s ə ˈ h iː d r ən,-k ə-,-k oʊ-/ or / aɪ ˌ k ɒ s ə ˈ h iː d r ən / [1]) is a polyhedron with 20 faces.
(Definition varies among authors; e.g. some exclude solids with dihedral symmetry, or nonconvex solids.) Uniform if every face is a regular polygon, i.e. it is regular, quasiregular or semi-regular. Semi-uniform if its elements are also isogonal. Scaliform if all the edges are the same length. Noble if it is also isohedral (face-transitive).
The icosahedral symmetry can still be maintained with more than 60 subunits, but only in multiples of 60. For example, the T=3 Tomato bushy stunt virus has 60x3 protein subunits (180 copies of the same structural protein). [11] [12] Although these viruses are often referred to as 'spherical', they do not show true mathematical spherical symmetry.
In chemistry, the closo-carboranes are compounds with a shape resembling the regular icosahedron. [28] The crystal twinning with icosahedral shapes also occurs in crystals, especially nanoparticles. [29] Many borides and allotropes of boron such as α-and β-rhombohedral contain boron B 12 icosahedron as a basic structure unit. [30]
Icosahedral symmetry fundamental domains A soccer ball, a common example of a spherical truncated icosahedron, has full icosahedral symmetry. Rotations and reflections form the symmetry group of a great icosahedron. In mathematics, and especially in geometry, an object has icosahedral symmetry if it has the same symmetries as a regular icosahedron.
This shape is called a plesiohedron. The tiling generated in this way is isohedral, meaning that it not only has a single prototile ("monohedral") but also that any copy of this tile can be taken to any other copy by a symmetry of the tiling. [1] As with any space-filling polyhedron, the Dehn invariant of a plesiohedron is necessarily zero. [3]
The truncated icosahedron is an Archimedean solid, meaning it is a highly symmetric and semi-regular polyhedron, and two or more different regular polygonal faces meet in a vertex. [5] It has the same symmetry as the regular icosahedron, the icosahedral symmetry , and it also has the property of vertex-transitivity .