Simple polytope




Three-dimensional associahedron. Each vertex has three neighboring edges and faces, so this is a simple polyhedron.


In geometry, a d-dimensional simple polytope is a d-dimensional polytope each of whose vertices are adjacent to exactly d edges (also d facets). The vertex figure of a simple d-polytope is a (d − 1)-simplex.[1]


Simple polytopes are topologically dual to simplicial polytopes. The family of polytopes which are both simple and simplicial are simplices or two-dimensional polygons. A simple polyhedron is a three-dimensional polyhedron whose vertices are adjacent to three edges and three faces. The dual to a simple polyhedron is a simplicial polyhedron, in which all faces are triangles.[2]



Examples


Three-dimensional simple polyhedra include the
prisms (including the cube), the regular tetrahedron and dodecahedron, and, among the Archimedean solids, the truncated tetrahedron, truncated cube, truncated octahedron, truncated cuboctahedron, truncated dodecahedron, truncated icosahedron, and truncated icosidodecahedron.
They also include the Goldberg polyhedron and Fullerenes, including the chamfered tetrahedron, chamfered cube, and chamfered dodecahedron.
In general, any polyhedron can be made into a simple one by truncating its vertices of valence four or higher.
For instance, truncated trapezohedrons are formed by truncating only the high-degree vertices of a trapezohedron; they are also simple.


Four-dimensional simple polytopes include the regular 120-cell and tesseract.
Simple uniform 4-polytope include the
truncated 5-cell, truncated tesseract, truncated 24-cell, truncated 120-cell,
and duoprisms.
All bitruncated, cantitruncated or omnitruncated four-polytopes are simple.


Simple polytopes in higher dimensions include the
d-simplex, hypercube, associahedron, permutohedron, and all omnitruncated polytopes.



Unique reconstruction


Micha Perles conjectured that a simple polytope is completely determined by its 1-skeleton; his conjecture was proven in 1987 by Blind and Mani-Levitska.[3]Gil Kalai provided a later simplification of this result based on the theory of unique sink orientations.[4]



Notes




  1. ^ Ziegler, Günter M. (2012), Lectures on Polytopes, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 152, Springer, p. 8, ISBN 9780387943657 


  2. ^ Cromwell, Peter R. (1997), Polyhedra, Cambridge University Press, p. 341, ISBN 0-521-66405-5 


  3. ^ Blind, Roswitha; Mani-Levitska, Peter (1987), "Puzzles and polytope isomorphisms", Aequationes Mathematicae, 34 (2-3): 287–297, doi:10.1007/BF01830678, MR 0921106 .


  4. ^ Kalai, Gil (1988), "A simple way to tell a simple polytope from its graph", Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A, 49 (2): 381–383, doi:10.1016/0097-3165(88)90064-7, MR 0964396 .







The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Executable numpy error

Trying to Print Gridster Items to PDF without overlapping contents

Mass disable jenkins jobs