Inverted quasiprismatodishexadecachoron

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Inverted quasiprismatodishexadecachoron
Rank4
TypeUniform
Notation
Bowers style acronymIquipadah
Elements
Cells16 tetrahedra, 32 triangular prisms, 16 cubes, 8 octagonal prisms
Faces64 triangles, 32+32+64 squares, 8 octagons
Edges32+32+64+64
Vertices64
Vertex figureBlend of triangular antipodium and digonal disphenoid
Measures (edge length 1)
Circumradius
Hypervolume
Dichoral anglesTet–3–trip: 150°
 Cube–4–trip:
 Cube–4–op: 90°
 Op–8–op: 90°
 Trip–4–op:
Central density1
Number of external pieces80
Level of complexity30
Related polytopes
ArmySidpith
RegimentSidpith
ConjugateGreat quasiprismatodishexadecachoron
Convex coreTesseract
Abstract & topological properties
Flag count3072
Euler characteristic–8
OrientableYes
Properties
SymmetryB2≀S2, order 128
ConvexNo
NatureWild

The inverted quasiprismatodishexadecachoron, or iquipadah, is a nonconvex uniform polychoron that consists of 16 regular tetrahedra, 32 triangular prisms, 16 cubes, and 8 octagonal prisms. 1 tetrahedron, 3 triangular prisms, 2 cubes, and 2 octagonal prisms meet at each vertex.

It can be created by blending a small disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron with an octagonal diorthoprism, an inscribed compound of 2 square-octagonal duoprisms. In the process 16 cubical cells blend out.

Its vertex figure is concave, a property shared by sanbathi.

Jonathan Bowers wrote that the acronym iquipadah occurred to him in church before actually discovering the figure.[1]

Cross-sections[edit | edit source]

Card with cell counts, vertex figure, and cross-sections.


Vertex coordinates[edit | edit source]

Its vertices are the same as those of its regiment colonel, the small disprismatotesseractihexadecachoron.

External links[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Bowers, Jonathan. Uniform Polychora.