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{{Short description|Polyhedron with some pattern of nonconvexity}}
{{no footnotes|date=March 2023}}
In [[geometry]], a '''star polyhedron''' is a [[polyhedron]] which has some repetitive quality of [[nonconvex polygon|nonconvexity]] giving it a star-like visual quality.
In [[geometry]], a '''star polyhedron''' is a [[polyhedron]] which has some repetitive quality of [[nonconvex polygon|nonconvexity]] giving it a star-like visual quality.


There are two general kinds of star polyhedron:
There are two general kinds of star polyhedron:
*Polyhedra which self-intersect in a repetitive way.
*Polyhedra which self-intersect in a repetitive way.
*[[Concave polyhedra]] of a particular kind which alternate convex and concave or saddle vertices in a repetitive way.
*Concave polyhedra of a particular kind which alternate convex and concave or saddle vertices in a repetitive way. Mathematically these figures are examples of [[star domain]]s.


Studies of ''star polyhedra'' are usually concerned with [[regular polyhedron|regular]], [[Uniform polyhedron|uniform]] polyhedra, or the duals to the uniform polyhedra. All these stars are of the self-intersecting kind. So some authorities{{Who|date=August 2008}} might argue that the concave kind are not proper stars. But the latter usage is sufficiently widespread that it cannot be ignored. The important thing is to be clear which kind you mean.
Mathematical studies of star polyhedra are usually concerned with [[regular polyhedron|regular]], [[Uniform polyhedron|uniform]] polyhedra, or the [[Dual polyhedron|duals]] of the uniform polyhedra. All these stars are of the self-intersecting kind.


==Regular star polyhedra==
==Self-intersecting star polyhedra==


===Regular star polyhedra===
The regular star polyhedra, are self-intersecting polyhedra. They may either have self-intersecting [[Face (geometry)|faces]], or self-intersecting [[vertex figure]]s.


The regular star polyhedra are self-intersecting polyhedra. They may either have self-intersecting [[Face (geometry)|faces]], or self-intersecting [[vertex figure]]s.
There are four [[List_of_regular_polytopes#Three_dimensions_2|regular star polyhedra]], known as the [[Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra]]. The [[Schläfli symbol]] {p,q} implies faces with ''p'' sides, and vertex figures with ''q'' sides. Two of them have [[pentagram]]mic {5/2} faces and two have pentagrammic vertex figures.


There are four [[List of regular polytopes and compounds#Three dimensions 2|regular star polyhedra]], known as the [[Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra]]. The [[Schläfli symbol]] {''p'',''q''} implies faces with ''p'' sides, and vertex figures with ''q'' sides. Two of them have [[pentagram]]mic {5/2} faces and two have pentagrammic vertex figures.
[[Image:Kepler-Poinsot solids.svg|480px]]<BR>These images show each form with a single face colored yellow to show the visible portion of that face.


[[File:Kepler-Poinsot solids.svg]]<BR>These images show each form with a single face colored yellow to show the visible portion of that face.
== Uniform and dual uniform star polyhedra ==

There are also an infinite number of regular star [[dihedra]] and [[hosohedra]] {2,''p/q''} and {''p/q'',2} for any star polygon {''p/q''}. While degenerate in Euclidean space, they can be realised spherically in nondegenerate form.

=== Uniform and uniform dual star polyhedra ===


There are many [[Uniform star polyhedron|uniform star polyhedra]] including two infinite series, of [[Prismatic uniform polyhedron|prisms and of antiprisms]], and their [[Dual polyhedron|duals]].
There are many [[Uniform star polyhedron|uniform star polyhedra]] including two infinite series, of [[Prismatic uniform polyhedron|prisms and of antiprisms]], and their [[Dual polyhedron|duals]].
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The uniform star polyhedra have [[regular polygon|regular faces]] or regular [[star polygon]] faces. The dual uniform star polyhedra have regular faces or regular [[star polygon]] vertex figures.
The uniform star polyhedra have [[regular polygon|regular faces]] or regular [[star polygon]] faces. The dual uniform star polyhedra have regular faces or regular [[star polygon]] vertex figures.


===Examples===
{| class=wikitable width=480
{| class=wikitable width=480
|+ Example uniform polyhedra and their duals
![[Uniform polyhedron]]
![[Uniform polyhedron]]
![[Dual polyhedron]]
![[Dual polyhedron]]
|-
|-
|[[Image:Pentagrammic prism.png|240px]]<BR>The [[pentagrammic prism]] is a [[Prismatic uniform polyhedron|prismatic star polyhedron]]. It is composed of two [[pentagram]] faces connected by five intersecting [[Square (geometry)|square]] faces.
|[[Image:Pentagrammic prism.png|240px]]<BR>The [[pentagrammic prism]] is a [[Prismatic uniform polyhedron|prismatic star polyhedron]]. It is composed of two [[pentagram]] faces connected by five intersecting [[Square (geometry)|square]] faces.
|[[Image:Pentagram Dipyramid.png|240px]]<BR>The [[pentagrammic dipyramid]] is also a ''star polyhedron'', representing the dual to the pentagrammic prism. It is [[face-transitive]], composed of 10 intersecting [[isoceles triangle]]s.
|[[Image:Pentagram Dipyramid.png|240px]]<BR>The [[pentagrammic dipyramid]] is also a ''star polyhedron'', representing the dual to the pentagrammic prism. It is [[face-transitive]], composed of ten intersecting [[isosceles triangle]]s.
|-
|-
|[[Image:Great dodecicosahedron.png|240px]]<BR>The [[great dodecicosahedron]] is a star polyhedron, constructed from a single [[vertex figure]] of intersecting [[hexagon]]al and [[star polygon|decagram]]mic, {10/3}, [[Face (geometry)|faces]].
|[[Image:Great dodecicosahedron.png|240px]]<BR>The [[great dodecicosahedron]] is a star polyhedron, constructed from a single [[vertex figure]] of intersecting [[hexagon]]al and [[star polygon|decagram]]mic, {10/3}, [[Face (geometry)|faces]].
|[[Image:DU63 great dodecicosacron.png|240px]]<BR>The [[great dodecicosacron]] is the dual to the ''great dodecicosahedron''. It is [[face-transitive]], composed of 60 intersecting ''bow-tie'' shaped [[quadrilateral]] faces.
|[[Image:DU63 great dodecicosacron.png|240px]]<BR>The [[great dodecicosacron]] is the dual to the ''great dodecicosahedron''. It is [[face-transitive]], composed of 60 intersecting ''bow-tie''-shaped [[quadrilateral]] faces.
|}
|}


== Other star polyhedra ==
=== Stellations and facettings ===

Beyond the forms above, there are unlimited classes of self-intersecting (star) polyhedra.
Beyond the forms above, there are unlimited classes of self-intersecting (star) polyhedra.


Two important classes are the [[stellation]]s of convex polyhedra and their duals, the [[facetting]]s of the dual polyhedra.
One class is the [[isohedral figure]]s, which are like the uniform figures, but don't require regular faces.


For example, the [[complete stellation of the icosahedron]] can be interpreted as a self-intersecting polyhedron composed of 12 identical faces, each a (9/4) wound polygon. Below is an illustration of this polyhedron with one face drawn in yellow.
For example, the [[complete stellation of the icosahedron]] (illustrated) can be interpreted as a self-intersecting polyhedron composed of 20 identical faces, each a (9/4) wound polygon. Below is an illustration of this polyhedron with one face drawn in yellow.


[[Image:Echidnahedron with enneagram face.png|320px]]
[[Image:Echidnahedron with enneagram face.png|280px]]


== Star polytopes ==
=== Star polytopes ===


Higher dimensional intersecting [[polytope]]s are called '''star polytopes'''.
A similarly self-intersecting [[polytope]] in any number of dimensions is called a '''star polytope'''.


A regular polytope {p,q,r,...,s,t} is a star-polytope if either its facets {p,q,...s}, or its vertex figure {q,r,...,s,t} is a star polytope.
A regular polytope {''p'',''q'',''r'',...,''s'',''t''} is a star polytope if either its facet {''p'',''q'',...''s''} or its vertex figure {''q'',''r'',...,''s'',''t''} is a star polytope.


In four dimensions, the [[List_of_regular_polytopes#Non-convex_3|10 regular star polychora]], called the [[Schläfli-Hess polychoron|Schläfli-Hess polychora]]. Like the regular star polyhedra, these 10 are all composed of facets which are either one of the five regular [[Platonic solid]]s or one of the four regular star [[Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra]].
In four dimensions, the [[List of regular polytopes#Non-convex 3|10 regular star polychora]] are called the [[Schläfli–Hess polychoron|Schläfli–Hess polychora]]. Analogous to the regular star polyhedra, these 10 are all composed of facets which are either one of the five regular [[Platonic solid]]s or one of the four regular star [[Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra]].


For example, the [[great grand stellated 120-cell]], projected orthogonally into 3-space looks like this:
For example, the [[great grand stellated 120-cell]], projected orthogonally into 3-space, looks like this:
:[[Image:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|320px]]
:[[Image:Ortho solid 016-uniform polychoron p33-t0.png|320px]]

There are no regular star polytopes in dimensions higher than 4{{Citation needed|reason=When was this proven and by whom?|date=November 2022}}.

== Star-domain star polyhedra ==
[[File:19. Moravian Star.JPG|alt=|thumb|A Moravian star hung outside a church]]

A polyhedron which does not cross itself, such that all of the interior can be seen from one interior point, is an example of a [[star domain]]. The visible exterior portions of many self-intersecting star polyhedra form the boundaries of star domains,
but despite their similar appearance, as [[abstract polyhedra]] these are different structures. For instance, the small stellated dodecahedron has 12 pentagram faces, but the corresponding star domain has 60 isosceles triangle faces, and correspondingly different numbers of vertices and edges.

Polyhedral star domains appear in various types of architecture, usually religious in nature. For example, they are seen on many baroque churches as symbols of the [[Pope]] who built the church, on Hungarian churches and on other religious buildings. These stars can also be used as decorations. [[Moravian star]]s are used for both purposes and can be constructed in various forms.


== See also ==
== See also ==
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* [[Polyhedral compound]]
* [[Polyhedral compound]]
* [[List of uniform polyhedra]]
* [[List of uniform polyhedra]]
* [[Uniform star polyhedron/Uniform polyhedra by Wythoff construction]]
* [[List of uniform polyhedra by Schwarz triangle]]


==Notes==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
*[[Coxeter|Coxeter, H.S.M.]], [[Michael S. Longuet-Higgins|M. S. Longuet-Higgins]] and J.C.P Miller, Uniform Polyhedra, ''Phil. Trans.'' '''246 A''' (1954) pp.&nbsp;401–450.

*Coxeter, H.S.M., ''[[Regular Polytopes (book)|Regular Polytopes]]'', 3rd. ed., Dover Publications, 1973. {{isbn|0-486-61480-8}}. (VI. Star-polyhedra, XIV. Star-polytopes) (p.&nbsp;263) [https://books.google.com/books?id=iWvXsVInpgMC&dq=star-polytope&pg=PA263]
==References==
* [[John Horton Conway|John H. Conway]], Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, ''The Symmetries of Things'' 2008, {{isbn|978-1-56881-220-5}} (Chapter 26, Regular star-polytopes, pp.&nbsp;404–408)
*[[Coxeter|Coxeter, H.S.M.]], [[Michael S. Longuet-Higgins|M.S. Longuet-Higgins]] and J.C.P Miller, Uniform Polyhedra, ''Phil. Trans.'' '''246 A''' (1954) pp.&nbsp;401–450.
* Tarnai, T., Krähling, J. and Kabai, S.; "Star polyhedra: from St. Mark's Basilica in Venice to Hungarian Protestant churches", Paper ID209, ''Proc. of the IASS 2007, Shell and Spatial Structures: Structural Architecture-Towards the Future Looking to the Past'', University of IUAV, 2007. [http://www.saintjohnsabbey.org/wenninger/seteight/PAP209tarnai.pdf] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101129202720/http://saintjohnsabbey.org/wenninger/seteight/PAP209tarnai.pdf |date=2010-11-29 }} or [http://www.employees.csbsju.edu/mwenninger/seteight/PAP209tarnai.pdf]{{Dead link|date=February 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
*Coxeter, H.S.M., ''[[Regular Polytopes (book)|Regular Polytopes]]'', 3rd. ed., Dover Publications, 1973. ISBN 0-486-61480-8. (VI. Star-polyhedra, XIV. Star-polytopes) (p.&nbsp;263) [http://books.google.com/books?id=iWvXsVInpgMC&pg=PA263&dq=star-polytope#v=onepage&q=star-polytope&f=false]
* [[John Horton Conway|John H. Conway]], Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strass, ''The Symmetries of Things'' 2008, ISBN 978-1-56881-220-5 (Chapter 26, Regular star-polytopes, pp.&nbsp;404–408)


==External links==
==External links==
*{{Mathworld | urlname=StarPolyhedron | title=Star Polyhedron }}
*{{Mathworld | urlname=StarPolyhedron | title=Star Polyhedron }}
* [http://www.saintjohnsabbey.org/wenninger/seteight/PAP209tarnai.pdf Tibor TARNAI, János KRÄHLING, Sándor KABAI: ''STAR POLYHEDRA: FROM ST MARK’S BASILICA IN VENICE TO HUNGARIAN PROTESTANT CHURCHES'']


[[Category:Polyhedra]]
[[Category:Polyhedra]]

[[de:Sternkörper]]
[[fr:Polyèdre étoilé]]
[[nl:Sterveelvlak]]

Latest revision as of 17:52, 14 November 2024

In geometry, a star polyhedron is a polyhedron which has some repetitive quality of nonconvexity giving it a star-like visual quality.

There are two general kinds of star polyhedron:

  • Polyhedra which self-intersect in a repetitive way.
  • Concave polyhedra of a particular kind which alternate convex and concave or saddle vertices in a repetitive way. Mathematically these figures are examples of star domains.

Mathematical studies of star polyhedra are usually concerned with regular, uniform polyhedra, or the duals of the uniform polyhedra. All these stars are of the self-intersecting kind.

Self-intersecting star polyhedra

[edit]

Regular star polyhedra

[edit]

The regular star polyhedra are self-intersecting polyhedra. They may either have self-intersecting faces, or self-intersecting vertex figures.

There are four regular star polyhedra, known as the Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra. The Schläfli symbol {p,q} implies faces with p sides, and vertex figures with q sides. Two of them have pentagrammic {5/2} faces and two have pentagrammic vertex figures.


These images show each form with a single face colored yellow to show the visible portion of that face.

There are also an infinite number of regular star dihedra and hosohedra {2,p/q} and {p/q,2} for any star polygon {p/q}. While degenerate in Euclidean space, they can be realised spherically in nondegenerate form.

Uniform and uniform dual star polyhedra

[edit]

There are many uniform star polyhedra including two infinite series, of prisms and of antiprisms, and their duals.

The uniform and dual uniform star polyhedra are also self-intersecting polyhedra. They may either have self-intersecting faces, or self-intersecting vertex figures or both.

The uniform star polyhedra have regular faces or regular star polygon faces. The dual uniform star polyhedra have regular faces or regular star polygon vertex figures.

Example uniform polyhedra and their duals
Uniform polyhedron Dual polyhedron

The pentagrammic prism is a prismatic star polyhedron. It is composed of two pentagram faces connected by five intersecting square faces.

The pentagrammic dipyramid is also a star polyhedron, representing the dual to the pentagrammic prism. It is face-transitive, composed of ten intersecting isosceles triangles.

The great dodecicosahedron is a star polyhedron, constructed from a single vertex figure of intersecting hexagonal and decagrammic, {10/3}, faces.

The great dodecicosacron is the dual to the great dodecicosahedron. It is face-transitive, composed of 60 intersecting bow-tie-shaped quadrilateral faces.

Stellations and facettings

[edit]

Beyond the forms above, there are unlimited classes of self-intersecting (star) polyhedra.

Two important classes are the stellations of convex polyhedra and their duals, the facettings of the dual polyhedra.

For example, the complete stellation of the icosahedron (illustrated) can be interpreted as a self-intersecting polyhedron composed of 20 identical faces, each a (9/4) wound polygon. Below is an illustration of this polyhedron with one face drawn in yellow.

Star polytopes

[edit]

A similarly self-intersecting polytope in any number of dimensions is called a star polytope.

A regular polytope {p,q,r,...,s,t} is a star polytope if either its facet {p,q,...s} or its vertex figure {q,r,...,s,t} is a star polytope.

In four dimensions, the 10 regular star polychora are called the Schläfli–Hess polychora. Analogous to the regular star polyhedra, these 10 are all composed of facets which are either one of the five regular Platonic solids or one of the four regular star Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra.

For example, the great grand stellated 120-cell, projected orthogonally into 3-space, looks like this:

There are no regular star polytopes in dimensions higher than 4[citation needed].

Star-domain star polyhedra

[edit]
A Moravian star hung outside a church

A polyhedron which does not cross itself, such that all of the interior can be seen from one interior point, is an example of a star domain. The visible exterior portions of many self-intersecting star polyhedra form the boundaries of star domains, but despite their similar appearance, as abstract polyhedra these are different structures. For instance, the small stellated dodecahedron has 12 pentagram faces, but the corresponding star domain has 60 isosceles triangle faces, and correspondingly different numbers of vertices and edges.

Polyhedral star domains appear in various types of architecture, usually religious in nature. For example, they are seen on many baroque churches as symbols of the Pope who built the church, on Hungarian churches and on other religious buildings. These stars can also be used as decorations. Moravian stars are used for both purposes and can be constructed in various forms.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • Coxeter, H.S.M., M. S. Longuet-Higgins and J.C.P Miller, Uniform Polyhedra, Phil. Trans. 246 A (1954) pp. 401–450.
  • Coxeter, H.S.M., Regular Polytopes, 3rd. ed., Dover Publications, 1973. ISBN 0-486-61480-8. (VI. Star-polyhedra, XIV. Star-polytopes) (p. 263) [1]
  • John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, The Symmetries of Things 2008, ISBN 978-1-56881-220-5 (Chapter 26, Regular star-polytopes, pp. 404–408)
  • Tarnai, T., Krähling, J. and Kabai, S.; "Star polyhedra: from St. Mark's Basilica in Venice to Hungarian Protestant churches", Paper ID209, Proc. of the IASS 2007, Shell and Spatial Structures: Structural Architecture-Towards the Future Looking to the Past, University of IUAV, 2007. [2] Archived 2010-11-29 at the Wayback Machine or [3][permanent dead link]
[edit]