 Mathematicians playing with geometrical solids tend to concentrate on the finite ones. Those provide a nice satisfying sense of closure, and they're cheaper to build with straws and pipecleaners than the infinite ones.
Mathematicians playing with geometrical solids tend to concentrate on the finite ones. Those provide a nice satisfying sense of closure, and they're cheaper to build with straws and pipecleaners than the infinite ones.This is an interesting shape that doesn't fall into that category. It's a simple rigid stack of tetrahedra that generates a "column" with a triple-helix. The odd thing is, you'd expect an architect somewhere to have already used this on a structure somewhere ... but I don't recall ever seeing it.
Maybe I missed it.
The sequence rotates through [~]120 degrees and [nearly] maps onto itself every nine tetrahedra (that is, the tenth [nearly] aligns with the first). If you want to follow one of the spiral arms through a complete [~]360-degree revolution, that takes 9×3=27 tetrahedra, (#28 corresponds to #1) .
Oh, and it has a hole running right down the middle.
I'll try to upload some more images in another post.
 
 
 
 
 
1 comment:
I "discovered" this while playing with a magnet toy. This is the first I've seen it documented. So simple -- thanks for writing this up!
--Derek
Post a Comment