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{{short description|Linear stacking of regular tetrahedra that form helices}}

{| class=wikitable align=right width=280
{| class=wikitable align=right width=280
|+ Coxeter helixes from regular tetrahedra
|+ Coxeter helices from regular tetrahedra
|- align=center
|- align=center
|[[File:Coxeter_helix_3_colors.png|280px]]<BR>[[File:Coxeter_helix_3_colors_cw.png|280px]]
|[[File:Coxeter_helix_3_colors.png|280px]]<BR>[[File:Coxeter_helix_3_colors_cw.png|280px]]
Line 6: Line 8:
|CCW and CW turning
|CCW and CW turning
|- align=center
|- align=center
|[[File:Coxeter_helix_edges.png|280px]]<BR>Edges can be colored into 6 groups, 3 main helixes (cyan), with the concave edges forming a slow forward helixes (magenta), and two backwards helixes (yellow and orange)
|[[File:Coxeter_helix_edges.png|280px]]<BR>Edges can be colored into 6 groups, 3 main helixes (cyan), with the concave edges forming a slow forward helix (magenta), and two backwards helixes (yellow and orange){{Sfn|Sadoc|Rivier|1999|p=314|loc=§4.2.2 The Boerdijk-Coxeter helix and the PPII helix|ps=; the helix of tetrahedra occurs in a left- or right-spiraling form, but each form contains ''both'' left- and right-spiraling helices of linked edges.}}
|}
|}

[[File:Boerdijk helical sphere packing.png|thumb|A Boerdijk helical [[sphere packing]] has each [[sphere]] centered at a [[Vertex (geometry)|vertex]] of the Coxeter helix. Each sphere is in contact with 6 neighboring spheres.]]
[[File:Boerdijk helical sphere packing.png|thumb|A Boerdijk helical [[sphere packing]] has each [[sphere]] centered at a [[Vertex (geometry)|vertex]] of the Coxeter helix. Each sphere is in contact with 6 neighboring spheres.]]
The '''Boerdijk–Coxeter helix''', named after [[H. S. M. Coxeter]] and [[A. H. Boerdijk]], is a linear stacking of regular [[tetrahedron|tetrahedra]], arranged so that the edges of the complex that belong to a single tetrahedron form three intertwined [[helix|helices]]. There are two [[Chirality (mathematics)|chiral]] forms, with either clockwise or counterclockwise windings. Contrary to any other stacking of [[Platonic solids]], the Boerdijk–Coxeter helix is not rotationally repetitive. Even in an infinite string of stacked tetrahedra, no two tetrahedra will have the same orientation. This is because the helical pitch per cell is not a rational fraction of the circle.


The '''Boerdijk–Coxeter helix''', named after [[H. S. M. Coxeter]] and {{ill|Arie Hendrick Boerdijk|es}}, is a linear stacking of regular [[tetrahedron|tetrahedra]], arranged so that the edges of the complex that belong to only one tetrahedron form three intertwined [[helix|helices]]. There are two [[Chirality (mathematics)|chiral]] forms, with either clockwise or counterclockwise windings. Unlike any other stacking of [[Platonic solids]], the Boerdijk–Coxeter helix is not rotationally repetitive in 3-dimensional space. Even in an infinite string of stacked tetrahedra, no two tetrahedra will have the same orientation, because the helical pitch per cell is not a rational fraction of the circle. However, modified forms of this helix have been found which are rotationally repetitive,{{Sfn|Sadler|Fang|Kovacs|Klee|2013}} and in 4-dimensional space this helix repeats in rings of exactly 30 tetrahedral cells that tessellate the [[3-sphere]] surface of the [[600-cell]], one of the six regular convex [[4-polytope|polychora]].
[[Buckminster Fuller]] named it a ''tetrahelix'' and considered them with regular and irregular tetrahedral elements.<ref>http://www.rwgrayprojects.com/synergetics/s09/p3000.html</ref>


[[Buckminster Fuller]] named it a ''tetrahelix'' and considered them with regular and irregular tetrahedral elements.{{Sfn|Fuller|1975|loc=[http://www.rwgrayprojects.com/synergetics/s09/p3000.html 930.00 Tetrahelix]}}
==Architecture==


== Geometry ==
See the [[Art Tower Mito]].
The coordinates of vertices of Boerdijk–Coxeter helix composed of tetrahedrons with unit edge length can be written in the form


: <math>(r\cos n\theta,r\sin n\theta,n h)</math>
== Higher-dimensional geometry ==
where <math>r=3\sqrt{3}/10</math>, <math>\theta=\pm\cos^{-1}(-2/3) \approx 131.81^\circ</math>, <math>h=1/\sqrt{10}</math> and <math>n</math> is an arbitrary integer. The two different values of <math>\theta</math> correspond to two chiral forms. All vertices are located on the cylinder with radius <math> r </math> along z-axis. Given how the tetrahedra alternate, this gives an ''apparent'' twist of <math>2\theta - \frac{4}{3}\pi \approx 23.62^\circ</math> every ''two'' tetrahedra. There is another inscribed cylinder with radius <math>3\sqrt{2}/20</math> inside the helix.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.rwgrayprojects.com/rbfnotes/helix/helix01.html | title=Tetrahelix Data}}</ref>

==Higher-dimensional geometry==
[[File:600-cell_tet_ring.png|thumb|left|30 tetrahedral ring from 600-cell projection]]
[[File:600-cell_tet_ring.png|thumb|left|30 tetrahedral ring from 600-cell projection]]
The [[600-cell#Union_of_two_tori|600-cell]] partitions into 20 rings of 30 [[tetrahedron|tetrahedra]], each a ''Boerdijk–Coxeter helix''. When superimposed onto the [[3-sphere]] curvature it becomes periodic, with a period of ten vertices, encompassing all 30 cells. The collective of such helices in the 600-cell represent a discrete [[Hopf fibration#Discrete examples|Hopf fibration]]. While in 3 dimensions the edges are helices, in the imposed 3-sphere [[topology]] they are [[geodesic]]s and have no [[Torsion of a curve|torsion]]. They spiral around each other naturally due to the Hopf fibration.
The [[600-cell]] partitions into [[600-cell#Boerdijk–Coxeter helix rings|20 rings]] of 30 [[tetrahedron|tetrahedra]], each a Boerdijk–Coxeter helix.{{Sfn|Sadoc|2001|loc=§2.5 The 30/11 symmetry: an example of other kind of symmetries|pp=577-578}} When superimposed onto the [[3-sphere]] curvature it becomes periodic, with a period of ten vertices, encompassing all 30 cells. The collective of such helices in the 600-cell represent a discrete [[Hopf fibration]].{{Sfn|Banchoff|2013|ps=, studied the decomposition of regular 4-polytopes into honeycombs of tori tiling the [[Clifford torus]] which correspond to [[Hopf fibration]]s.}} While in 3 dimensions the edges are helices, in the imposed 3-sphere [[topology]] they are [[geodesic]]s and have no [[Torsion of a curve|torsion]]. They spiral around each other naturally due to the Hopf fibration.{{Sfn|Banchoff|1988}} The collective of edges forms another discrete Hopf [[600-cell#Decagons|fibration of 12 rings]] with 10 vertices each. These correspond to [[120-cell#Intertwining rings|rings of 10 dodecahedrons]] in the dual [[120-cell]].


In addition, the [[16-cell]] partitions into two 8-tetrahedron rings, four edges long, and the [[5-cell]] partitions into a single degenerate 5-tetrahedron rings.
In addition, the [[16-cell]] partitions into two [[16-cell#Helical construction|8-tetrahedron rings]], four edges long, and the [[5-cell]] partitions into a single degenerate [[5-cell#Boerdijk–Coxeter helix|5-tetrahedron ring]].
{{Clear}}
{| class="wikitable sortable"
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
|-
! 4-polytope ||Rings|| Tetrahedra/ring||Cycle lengths|| Net||Projection
! 4-polytope ||Rings|| Tetrahedra/ring||Cycle lengths|| Net||Projection
|- align=center
|- align=center
! [[600-cell]]
! [[600-cell#Boerdijk–Coxeter helix rings|600-cell]]
||20 || 30 || 30, 10<sup>3</sup>, 15<sup>2</sup>||[[File:Coxeter_helix_600-cell_net.png|200px]]|| [[File:600-cell_Coxeter_helix-ring.png|150px]]
||20 || 30 || 30, 10<sup>3</sup>, 15<sup>2</sup>||[[File:Coxeter_helix_600-cell_net.png|200px]]|| [[File:600-cell_Coxeter_helix-ring.png|150px]]
|- align=center
|- align=center
! [[16-cell]]
! [[16-cell#Helical construction|16-cell]]
|| 2|| 8|| 8, 8, 4<sup>2</sup>||colspan=2|[[File:16-cell 8-ring net4.png|350px]]
|| 2|| 8|| 8, 8, 4<sup>2</sup>||colspan=2|[[File:16-cell 8-ring net4.png|350px]]
|- align=center
|- align=center
! [[5-cell]]
! [[5-cell#Boerdijk–Coxeter helix|5-cell]]
|| 1|| 5|| (5, 5), 5||colspan=2|[[File:5-cell 5-ring net.png|350px]]
|| 1|| 5|| (5, 5), 5||colspan=2|[[File:5-cell 5-ring net.png|350px]]
|}
|}


== Related polyhedral helixes==
== Related polyhedral helixes ==
Equilateral [[square pyramid]]s can also be chained together as a helix, with two [[vertex configuration]]s, 3.4.3.4 and 3.3.4.3.3.4. This helix exists as finite ring of [[Rectified_600-cell#Related_polytopes|30 pyramids in a 4-dimensional polytope]].
Equilateral [[square pyramid]]s can also be chained together as a helix, with two [[vertex configuration]]s, 3.4.3.4 and 3.3.4.3.3.4. This helix exists as finite ring of [[Rectified 600-cell#Related polytopes|30 pyramids in a 4-dimensional polytope]].
:[[File:Square_pyramid_helix.png|800px]]
:[[File:Square_pyramid_helix.png|800px]]
And equilateral [[pentagonal pyramid]]s can be chained with 3 vertex configurations, 3.3.5, 3.5.3.5, and 3.3.3.5.3.3.5:
And equilateral [[pentagonal pyramid]]s can be chained with 3 vertex configurations, 3.3.5, 3.5.3.5, and 3.3.3.5.3.3.5:
:[[File:Penta_pyramid_helix.png|800px]]
:[[File:Penta_pyramid_helix.png|800px]]

== In architecture ==
The [[Art Tower Mito]] is based on a Boerdijk–Coxeter helix.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[600-cell#Clifford parallel cell rings|Clifford parallel cell rings]]
* [[Toroidal polyhedron]]
* [[Toroidal polyhedron]]
* [[Line group#Helical symmetry]]
* [[Line group#Helical symmetry]]
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== References ==
== References ==
{{Refbegin}}
* [[H.S.M. Coxeter]], ''Regular Complex Polytopes'', Cambridge University, 1974.
*{{cite book |author-link=H.S.M. Coxeter |last=Coxeter |first=H. S. M. |title=Regular Complex Polytopes |url=https://archive.org/details/regularcomplexpo0000coxe |url-access=registration |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1974 |isbn=052120125X}}
* A.H. Boerdijk, Philips Res. Rep. 7 (1952) 30
*{{cite journal |first=A.H. |last=Boerdijk |title=Some remarks concerning close-packing of equal spheres |journal=Philips Res. Rep. |volume=7 |pages=303–313 |year=1952 }}
* ''The c-brass structure and the Boerdijk–Coxeter helix'', E.A. Lord, S. Ranganathan, 2004, pp.&nbsp;123–125 [http://materials.iisc.ernet.in/~lord/webfiles/icq8.pdf]
*{{cite book | last=Fuller | first=R.Buckminster | title=Synergetics | year=1975 | publisher=Macmillan | url=http://www.rwgrayprojects.com/synergetics/toc/toc.html | editor-last=Applewhite | editor-first=E.J.|author-link=Buckminster Fuller}}
* ''Chiral Gold Nanowires with Boerdijk–Coxeter–Bernal Structure'', Yihan Zhu, Jiating He, Cheng Shang, Xiaohe Miao, Jianfeng Huang, Zhipan Liu, Hongyu Chen and Yu Han, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2014, 136 (36), pp 12746–12752 [http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja506554j]
*{{cite book |first=Anthony |last=Pugh |year=1976 |title=Polyhedra: A visual approach |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-03056-5 |chapter=5. Joining polyhedra §5.36 Tetrahelix |page=53}}
* Eric A. Lord, Alan Lindsay Mackay, Srinivasa Ranganathan, ''New geometries for new materials'', p 64, sec 4.5 The Boerdijk–Coxeter helix
*{{Cite arXiv |last1=Sadler |first1=Garrett |last2=Fang |first2=Fang |last3=Kovacs |first3=Julio |last4=Klee |first4=Irwin |year=2013 |title=Periodic modification of the Boerdijk-Coxeter helix (tetrahelix) |class=math.MG |eprint=1302.1174v1 }}
* J.F. Sadoc and N. Rivier, ''Boerdijk-Coxeter helix and biological helices'' The European Physical Journal B - Condensed Matter and Complex Systems, Volume 12, Number 2, 309-318, {{doi|10.1007/s100510051009}} [http://epjb.edpsciences.org/index.php?option=com_article&access=standard&Itemid=129&url=/articles/epjb/abs/1999/22/b8774/b8774.html]
*{{cite journal |first1=E.A. |last1=Lord |first2=S. |last2=Ranganathan |title=The γ-brass structure and the Boerdijk–Coxeter helix |journal=Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids |volume=334-335 |pages=123–5 |year=2004 |doi=10.1016/j.jnoncrysol.2003.11.069 |bibcode=2004JNCS..334..121L |url=https://ericlord.neocities.org/ericsfiles/pdfs/65.pdf}}
* {{cite book | author= Anthony Pugh | year= 1976 | title= Polyhedra: A visual approach | publisher= University of California Press Berkeley | location= California | isbn= 0-520-03056-7 }} Chapter 5: Joining polyhedra, 5.36 Tetrahelix p.&nbsp;53
*{{cite journal |first1=Yihan |last1=Zhu |first2=Jiating |last2=He |first3=Cheng |last3=Shang |first4=Xiaohe |last4=Miao |first5=Jianfeng |last5=Huang |first6=Zhipan |last6=Liu |first7=Hongyu |last7=Chen |first8=Yu |last8=Han |title=Chiral Gold Nanowires with Boerdijk–Coxeter–Bernal Structure |journal=J. Am. Chem. Soc.|volume=136 |issue=36 |pages=12746–52 |year=2014 |doi=10.1021/ja506554j |pmid=25126894 |doi-access=free }}
*{{cite book |first1=Eric A. |last1=Lord |first2=Alan L. |last2=Mackay |first3=S. |last3=Ranganathan |title=New Geometries for New Materials |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s22_x-O8pEoC&pg=PP1 |date=2006 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-86104-5 |page=64 |chapter=§4.5 The Boerdijk–Coxeter helix}}
* {{cite book | chapter=Geometry of the Hopf Mapping and Pinkall's Tori of Given Conformal Type | last=Banchoff | first=Thomas F.| publisher=Marcel Dekker | place=New York and Basel | year=1988 | editor-last=Tangora | editor-first=Martin | title=Computers in Algebra | pages=57–62}}
* {{cite book|last=Banchoff|first=Thomas F.|chapter=Torus Decompostions of Regular Polytopes in 4-space|date=2013|title=Shaping Space|url=https://archive.org/details/shapingspaceexpl00sene|url-access=limited|pages=[https://archive.org/details/shapingspaceexpl00sene/page/n249 257]–266|editor-last=Senechal|editor-first=Marjorie|publisher=Springer New York|doi=10.1007/978-0-387-92714-5_20|isbn=978-0-387-92713-8}}
*{{cite journal |first1=J.F. |last1=Sadoc |first2=N. |last2=Rivier |title=Boerdijk-Coxeter helix and biological helices |journal=The European Physical Journal B |volume=12 |issue=2 |pages=309–318 |year= 1999|doi=10.1007/s100510051009 |bibcode=1999EPJB...12..309S |s2cid=92684626 }}
* {{Cite journal|last=Sadoc|first=Jean-Francois|date=2001|title=Helices and helix packings derived from the {3,3,5} polytope|journal=[[European Physical Journal E]]|volume=5|pages=575–582|doi=10.1007/s101890170040|doi-access=|s2cid=121229939|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/260046074}}
{{Refend}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
* [http://flickriver.com/photos/fdecomite/5403437189/ Boerdijk-Coxeter helix animation]
* [http://flickriver.com/photos/fdecomite/5403437189/ Boerdijk-Coxeter helix animation]
* http://www.rwgrayprojects.com/rbfnotes/helix/helix01.html
* [http://www.rwgrayprojects.com/rbfnotes/helix/helix01.html Tetrahelix Data]

{{Spirals}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Boerdijk-Coxeter helix}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Boerdijk-Coxeter helix}}
[[Category:Helices]]
[[Category:Helices]]
[[Category:Polyhedra]]
[[Category:Polyhedra]]


{{polyhedron-stub}}

Latest revision as of 21:35, 11 April 2024

Coxeter helices from regular tetrahedra

CCW and CW turning

Edges can be colored into 6 groups, 3 main helixes (cyan), with the concave edges forming a slow forward helix (magenta), and two backwards helixes (yellow and orange)[1]
A Boerdijk helical sphere packing has each sphere centered at a vertex of the Coxeter helix. Each sphere is in contact with 6 neighboring spheres.

The Boerdijk–Coxeter helix, named after H. S. M. Coxeter and Arie Hendrick Boerdijk [es], is a linear stacking of regular tetrahedra, arranged so that the edges of the complex that belong to only one tetrahedron form three intertwined helices. There are two chiral forms, with either clockwise or counterclockwise windings. Unlike any other stacking of Platonic solids, the Boerdijk–Coxeter helix is not rotationally repetitive in 3-dimensional space. Even in an infinite string of stacked tetrahedra, no two tetrahedra will have the same orientation, because the helical pitch per cell is not a rational fraction of the circle. However, modified forms of this helix have been found which are rotationally repetitive,[2] and in 4-dimensional space this helix repeats in rings of exactly 30 tetrahedral cells that tessellate the 3-sphere surface of the 600-cell, one of the six regular convex polychora.

Buckminster Fuller named it a tetrahelix and considered them with regular and irregular tetrahedral elements.[3]

Geometry

[edit]

The coordinates of vertices of Boerdijk–Coxeter helix composed of tetrahedrons with unit edge length can be written in the form

where , , and is an arbitrary integer. The two different values of correspond to two chiral forms. All vertices are located on the cylinder with radius along z-axis. Given how the tetrahedra alternate, this gives an apparent twist of every two tetrahedra. There is another inscribed cylinder with radius inside the helix.[4]

Higher-dimensional geometry

[edit]
30 tetrahedral ring from 600-cell projection

The 600-cell partitions into 20 rings of 30 tetrahedra, each a Boerdijk–Coxeter helix.[5] When superimposed onto the 3-sphere curvature it becomes periodic, with a period of ten vertices, encompassing all 30 cells. The collective of such helices in the 600-cell represent a discrete Hopf fibration.[6] While in 3 dimensions the edges are helices, in the imposed 3-sphere topology they are geodesics and have no torsion. They spiral around each other naturally due to the Hopf fibration.[7] The collective of edges forms another discrete Hopf fibration of 12 rings with 10 vertices each. These correspond to rings of 10 dodecahedrons in the dual 120-cell.

In addition, the 16-cell partitions into two 8-tetrahedron rings, four edges long, and the 5-cell partitions into a single degenerate 5-tetrahedron ring.

4-polytope Rings Tetrahedra/ring Cycle lengths Net Projection
600-cell 20 30 30, 103, 152
16-cell 2 8 8, 8, 42
5-cell 1 5 (5, 5), 5
[edit]

Equilateral square pyramids can also be chained together as a helix, with two vertex configurations, 3.4.3.4 and 3.3.4.3.3.4. This helix exists as finite ring of 30 pyramids in a 4-dimensional polytope.

And equilateral pentagonal pyramids can be chained with 3 vertex configurations, 3.3.5, 3.5.3.5, and 3.3.3.5.3.3.5:

In architecture

[edit]

The Art Tower Mito is based on a Boerdijk–Coxeter helix.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Sadoc & Rivier 1999, p. 314, §4.2.2 The Boerdijk-Coxeter helix and the PPII helix; the helix of tetrahedra occurs in a left- or right-spiraling form, but each form contains both left- and right-spiraling helices of linked edges.
  2. ^ Sadler et al. 2013.
  3. ^ Fuller 1975, 930.00 Tetrahelix.
  4. ^ "Tetrahelix Data".
  5. ^ Sadoc 2001, pp. 577–578, §2.5 The 30/11 symmetry: an example of other kind of symmetries.
  6. ^ Banchoff 2013, studied the decomposition of regular 4-polytopes into honeycombs of tori tiling the Clifford torus which correspond to Hopf fibrations.
  7. ^ Banchoff 1988.

References

[edit]
[edit]