Dodecagram
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Dodecagram | |
---|---|
Rank | 2 |
Type | Regular |
Space | Spherical |
Notation | |
Bowers style acronym | Dodag |
Coxeter diagram | x12/5o (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Schläfli symbol | {12/5} |
Elements | |
Edges | 12 |
Vertices | 12 |
Vertex figure | Dyad, length (√6–√2)/2 |
Measures (edge length 1) | |
Circumradius | |
Inradius | |
Area | |
Angle | 30° |
Central density | 5 |
Number of external pieces | 24 |
Level of complexity | 2 |
Related polytopes | |
Army | Dog, edge length |
Dual | Dodecagram |
Conjugate | Dodecagon |
Convex core | Dodecagon |
Abstract & topological properties | |
Flag count | 24 |
Euler characteristic | 0 |
Orientable | Yes |
Properties | |
Symmetry | I2(12), order 24 |
Convex | No |
Nature | Tame |
The dodecagram is a star polygon with 12 sides. A regular dodecagram has equal sides and equal angles.
This is the fourth stellation of the dodecagon, and the only one that is not a compound. The only other polygons with a single non-compound stellation are the pentagon, the octagon, and the decagon.
It is the uniform quasitruncation of the hexagon, and as such appears as faces in a handful of uniform Euclidean tilings. It is the largest star polygon known to appear in any non-prismatic spherical or Euclidean uniform polytopes.
Vertex coordinates[edit | edit source]
Coordinates for a dodecagram of unit edge length, centered at the origin, are all permutations of:
Representations[edit | edit source]
A dodecagram has the following Coxeter diagrams:
- x12/5o (full symmetry)
- x6/5x (
) (G2 symmetry)
External links[edit | edit source]
- Bowers, Jonathan. "Regular Polygons and Other Two Dimensional Shapes".
- Wikipedia Contributors. "Dodecagram".
- Hartley, Michael. "{12}*24".