600-cell

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600-cell
Schlegel wireframe 600-cell vertex-centered.png
Schlegel diagram, vertex-centered
(vertices and edges)
Type Convex regular 4-polytope
Schläfli symbol {3,3,5}
Coxeter diagram CDel node.pngCDel 5.pngCDel node.pngCDel 3.pngCDel node.pngCDel 3.pngCDel node 1.png
Cells 600 (3.3.3) Tetrahedron.png
Faces 1200 {3}
Edges 720
Vertices 120
Vertex figure 600-cell verf.png
icosahedron
Petrie polygon 30-gon
Coxeter group H4, [3,3,5], order 14400
Dual 120-cell
Properties convex, isogonal, isotoxal, isohedral
Uniform index 35

In geometry, the 600-cell is the convex regular 4-polytope (four-dimensional analogue of a Platonic solid) with Schläfli symbol {3,3,5}. It is also called a C600, hexacosichoron and hexacosidedroid.[1]

The 600-cell is regarded as the 4-dimensional analog of the icosahedron, since it has five tetrahedra meeting at every edge, just as the icosahedron has five triangles meeting at every vertex. It is also called a tetraplex (abbreviated from "tetrahedral complex") and polytetrahedron, being bounded by tetrahedral cells.

Geometry

Its boundary is composed of 600 tetrahedral cells with 20 meeting at each vertex. Together they form 1200 triangular faces, 720 edges, and 120 vertices. The edges form 72 flat regular decagons. Each vertex of the 600-cell is a vertex of six such decagons.

The mutual distances of the vertices, measured in degrees of arc on the circumscribed hypersphere, only have the values 36° = \pi/5, 60°= \pi/3, 72° = 2\pi/5, 90° = \pi/2, 108° = 3\pi/5, 120° = 2\pi/3, 144° = 4\pi/5, and 180° = \pi. Departing from an arbitrary vertex V one has at 36° and 144° the 12 vertices of an icosahedron, at 60° and 120° the 20 vertices of a dodecahedron, at 72° and 108° again the 12 vertices of an icosahedron, at 90° the 30 vertices of an icosidodecahedron, and finally at 180° the antipodal vertex of V. References: S.L. van Oss (1899); F. Buekenhout and M. Parker (1998).

Its vertex figure is an icosahedron, and its dual polytope is the 120-cell. It has a dihedral angle of cos-1( (2 - 5cos(π/15)) / 3) = ~164.48°.[2]

Each cell touches, in some manner, 56 other cells. One cell contacts each of the four faces; two cells contact each of the six edges, but not a face; and ten cells contact each of the four vertices, but not a face or edge.

Coordinates

The vertices of a 600-cell centered at the origin of 4-space, with edges of length 1/φ (where φ = (1+√5) /2 is the golden ratio), can be given as follows: 16 vertices of the form:[3]

(±½, ±½, ±½, ±½),

and 8 vertices obtained from

(0, 0, 0, ±1)

by permuting coordinates. The remaining 96 vertices are obtained by taking even permutations of

½ (±φ, ±1, ±1/φ, 0).

Note that the first 16 vertices are the vertices of a tesseract, the second eight are the vertices of a 16-cell, and that all 24 vertices together are vertices of a 24-cell. The final 96 vertices are the vertices of a snub 24-cell, which can be found by partitioning each of the 96 edges of another 24-cell (dual to the first) in the golden ratio in a consistent manner.

When interpreted as quaternions, the 120 vertices of the 600-cell form a group under quaternionic multiplication. This group is often called the binary icosahedral group and denoted by 2I as it is the double cover of the ordinary icosahedral group I. It occurs twice in the rotational symmetry group RSG of the 600-cell as an invariant subgroup, namely as the subgroup 2IL of quaternion left-multiplications and as the subgroup 2IR of quaternion right-multiplications. Each rotational symmetry of the 600-cell is generated by specific elements of 2IL and 2IR; the pair of opposite elements generate the same element of RSG. The centre of RSG consists of the non-rotation Id and the central inversion -Id. We have the isomorphism RSG ≅ (2IL × 2IR) / {Id, -Id}. The order of RSG equals 120 × 120 / 2 = 7200.

The binary icosahedral group is isomorphic to SL(2,5).

The full symmetry group of the 600-cell is the Weyl group of H4. This is a group of order 14400. It consists of 7200 rotations and 7200 rotation-reflections. The rotations form an invariant subgroup of the full symmetry group. The rotational symmetry group was described by S.L. van Oss (1899); see References.

Visualization

The symmetries of the 3-D surface of the 600-cell are somewhat difficult to visualize due to both the large number of tetrahedral cells, and the fact that the tetrahedron has no opposing faces or vertices. One can start by realizing the 600-cell is the dual of the 120-cell. One may also notice that the 600-cell also contains the vertices of a dodecahedron, which with some effort can be seen in most of the below perspective projections.

A three-dimensional model of the 600-cell, in the collection of the Institut Henri Poincaré, was photographed in 1934–1935 by Man Ray, and formed part of two of his later "Shakesperean Equation" paintings.[4]

Union of two tori

100 tetrahedra in a 10x10 array forming a clifford torus boundary in the 600 cell.

The 120-cell can be decomposed into two disjoint tori. Since it is the dual of the 600-cell, this same dual tori structure exists in the 600-cell, although it is somewhat more complex. The 10-cell geodesic path in the 120-cell corresponds to a 10-vertex decagon path in the 600-cell. Start by assembling five tetrahedra around a common edge. This structure looks somewhat like an angular "flying saucer". Stack ten of these, vertex to vertex, "pancake" style. Fill in the annular ring between each "saucer" with 10 tetrahedra forming an icosahedron. You can view this as five, vertex stacked, icosahedral pyramids, with the five extra annular ring gaps also filled in. The surface is the same as that of ten stacked pentagonal antiprisms. You now have a torus consisting of 150 cells, ten edges long, with 100 exposed triangular faces, 150 exposed edges, and 50 exposed vertices. Stack another tetrahedron on each exposed face. This will give you a somewhat bumpy torus of 250 cells with 50 raised vertices, 50 valley vertices, and 100 valley edges. The valleys are 10 edge long closed paths and correspond to other instances of the 10-vertex decagon path mentioned above. These paths spiral around the center core path, but mathematically they are all equivalent. Build a second identical torus of 250 cells that interlinks with the first. This accounts for 500 cells. These two tori mate together with the valley vertices touching the raised vertices, leaving 100 tetrahedral voids that are filled with the remaining 100 tetrahedra that mate at the valley edges. This latter set of 100 tetrahedra are on the exact boundary of the duocylinder and form a clifford torus. They can be "unrolled" into a square 10x10 array. Incidentally this structure forms one tetrahedral layer in the tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb.

600-cell tet ring.png
A single 30-tetrahedron ring Boerdijk–Coxeter helix within the 600-cell, seen stereographic projection
600-cell Coxeter helix-ring.png
A 30-tetrahedron ring can be seen along the perimeter of this 30-gonal orthogonal projection

There are exactly 50 "egg crate" recesses and peaks on both sides that mate with the 250 cell tori. In this case into each recess, instead of an octahedron as in the honeycomb, fits a triangular bipyramid composed of two tetrahedra.

The 600-cell can be further partitioned into 20 disjoint intertwining rings of 30 cells and ten edges long each, forming a discrete Hopf fibration. These chains of 30 tetrahedra each form a Boerdijk–Coxeter helix. Five such helices nest and spiral around each of the 10-vertex decagon paths, forming the initial 150 cell torus mentioned above.

This decomposition of the 600-cell has symmetry [[10,2+,10]], order 400, the same symmetry as the grand antiprism. The grand antiprism is just the 600-cell with the two above 150-cell tori removed, leaving only the middle three layers of tetrahedra, similar to the belt of an icosahedron with the 5 top and 5 bottom triangles removed (pentagonal antiprism).

Images

2D projections

Orthographic projections by Coxeter planes
H4 - F4
600-cell graph H4.svg
[30]
600-cell t0 p20.svg
[20]
600-cell t0 F4.svg
[12]
H3 A2 / B3 / D4 A3 / B2
600-cell t0 H3.svg
[10]
600-cell t0 A2.svg
[6]
600-cell t0.svg
[4]

3D projections

Vertex-first projection
600cell-perspective-vertex-first-multilayer-01.png This image shows a vertex-first perspective projection of the 600-cell into 3D. The 600-cell is scaled to a vertex-center radius of 1, and the 4D viewpoint is placed 5 units away. Then the following enhancements are applied:
  • The 20 tetrahedra meeting at the vertex closest to the 4D viewpoint are rendered in solid color. Their icosahedral arrangement is clearly shown.
  • The tetrahedra immediately adjoining these 20 cells are rendered in transparent yellow.
  • The remaining cells are rendered in edge-outline.
  • Cells facing away from the 4D viewpoint (those lying on the "far side" of the 600-cell) have been culled, to reduce visual clutter in the final image.
Cell-first projection
600cell-perspective-cell-first-multilayer-02.png This image shows the 600-cell in cell-first perspective projection into 3D. Again, the 600-cell to a vertex-center radius of 1 and the 4D viewpoint is placed 5 units away. The following enhancements are then applied:
  • The nearest cell to the 4d viewpoint is rendered in solid color, lying at the center of the projection image.
  • The cells surrounding it (sharing at least 1 vertex) are rendered in transparent yellow.
  • The remaining cells are rendered in edge-outline.
  • Cells facing away from the 4D viewpoint have been culled for clarity.

This particular viewpoint shows a nice outline of 5 tetrahedra sharing an edge, towards the front of the 3D image.

Stereographic projection (on 3-sphere)
Stereographic polytope 600cell.png Cell-Centered
Simple Rotation
600-cell.gif A 3D projection of a 600-cell performing a simple rotation.

Frame synchronized animated comparison of the 600 cell using orthogonal isometric (left) and perspective (right) projections.

Diminished 600-cells

The snub 24-cell may be obtained from the 600-cell by removing the vertices of an inscribed 24-cell and taking the convex hull of the remaining vertices. This process is a diminishing of the 600-cell.

The grand antiprism may be obtained by another diminishing of the 600-cell: removing 20 vertices that lie on two mutually orthogonal rings and taking the convex hull of the remaining vertices.

A bi-24-diminished 600-cell, with all tridiminished icosahedron cells has 48 vertices removed, leaving 72 of 120 vertices of the 600-cell.

Name Bi-24-diminished 600-cell Snub 24-cell
(24-diminished 600-cell)
Grand antiprism
(20-diminished 600-cell)
600-cell
Vertices 72 96 100 120
Vertex figure
(Symmetry)
Biicositetradiminished 600-cell vertex figure.png
bi-tridiminished icosahedron
([2]+, order 2)
Snub 24-cell verf.png
tridiminished icosahedron
([3], order 6)
Grand antiprism verf.png
2-diminished icosahedron
([2], order 4)
600-cell verf.png
Icosahedron
([5,3], order 120)
Symmetry Order 144 (72×2) [3+,4,3]
Order 576 (96×6)
[[10,2+,10]]
Order 400 (100×4)
[5,3,3]
Order 14400 (120×120)
Net Biicositetradiminished hexacosichoron net.png Snub 24-cell-net.png Grand antiprism net.png 600-cell net.png
Ortho
H4 plane
Bidex ortho-30-gon.png Snub 24-cell ortho30-gon.png Grand antiprism ortho-30-gon.png 600-cell graph H4.svg
Ortho
F4 plane
Bidex ortho 12-gon.png 24-cell h01 F4.svg GrandAntiPrism-2D-F4.svg 600-cell t0 F4.svg

Related polytopes and honeycombs

It is similar to three regular 4-polytopes: the 5-cell {3,3,3}, 16-cell {3,3,4} of Euclidean 4-space, and the order-6 tetrahedral honeycomb {3,3,6} of hyperbolic space. All of these have a tetrahedral cells.

This 4-polytope is a part of a sequence of 4-polytope and honeycombs with icosahedron vertex figures:

See also

Notes

  1. Matila Ghyka, The Geometry of Art and Life (1977), p.68
  2. Coxeter, Regular polygons, p.293
  3. Weisstein, Eric W., "600-cell", MathWorld.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. See in particular mathematical object mo-6.2, p. 58; Antony and Cleopatra, SE-6, p. 59; mathematical object mo-9, p. 64; Merchant of Venice, SE-9, p. 65, and "The Hexacosichoron", Philip Ordning, p. 96.

References

  • H. S. M. Coxeter, Regular Polytopes, 3rd. ed., Dover Publications, 1973. ISBN 0-486-61480-8.
  • Kaleidoscopes: Selected Writings of H.S.M. Coxeter, edited by F. Arthur Sherk, Peter McMullen, Anthony C. Thompson, Asia Ivic Weiss, Wiley-Interscience Publication, 1995, ISBN 978-0-471-01003-6 [1]
    • (Paper 22) H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular and Semi-Regular Polytopes I, [Math. Zeit. 46 (1940) 380-407, MR 2,10]
    • (Paper 23) H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular and Semi-Regular Polytopes II, [Math. Zeit. 188 (1985) 559-591]
    • (Paper 24) H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular and Semi-Regular Polytopes III, [Math. Zeit. 200 (1988) 3-45]
  • J.H. Conway and M.J.T. Guy: Four-Dimensional Archimedean Polytopes, Proceedings of the Colloquium on Convexity at Copenhagen, page 38 und 39, 1965
  • N.W. Johnson: The Theory of Uniform Polytopes and Honeycombs, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Toronto, 1966
  • Four-dimensional Archimedean Polytopes (German), Marco Möller, 2004 PhD dissertation [2]
  • Oss, Salomon Levi van: Das regelmässige 600-Zell und seine selbstdeckenden Bewegungen. Verhandelingen der Koninklijke (Nederlandse) Akademie van Wetenschappen, Sectie 1 Deel 7 Nummer 1 (Afdeeling Natuurkunde). Amsterdam: 1899. Online at URL [3], reachable from the home page of the KNAW Digital Library at URL [4]. REMARK: Van Oss does not mention the arc distances between vertices of the 600-cell.
  • F. Buekenhout, M. Parker: The number of nets of the regular convex polytopes in dimension <= 4. Discrete Mathematics, Volume 186, Issues 1-3, 15 May 1998, Pages 69-94. REMARK: The authors do mention the arc distances between vertices of the 600-cell.

External links