Demihypercube
In geometry, demihypercubes are a class of n-polytopes constructed from alternation of an n-hypercube, labeled as hγn for being half of the hypercube family, γn. Half of the vertices are deleted and new facets are formed. The 2n facets become 2n -demicubes, and 2n -simplex facets are formed in place of the deleted vertices.
They have been named with a demi- prefix to each hypercube name: demicube, demitesseract, etc. The demicube is identical to the regular tetrahedron, and the demitesseract is identical to the regular 16-cell. The demipenteract is considered semiregular for having only regular facets. Higher forms do not have all regular facets but are all uniform polytopes.
The vertex-edge graph of the demihypercube is the halved cube graph.
An n-demicube has inversion symmetry if n is even.
Discovery
described the demipenteract in his 1900 publication listing all of the regular and semiregular figures in n-dimensions above three. He called it a 5-ic semi-regular. It also exists within the semiregular k21 polytope family.The demihypercubes can be represented by extended Schläfli symbols of the form h as half the vertices of. The vertex figures of demihypercubes are rectified n-simplexes.
Constructions
They are represented by Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams of three constructive forms:- ... s
- ... h
- ....
An n-demicube, n greater than 2, has n/2 edges meeting at each vertex. The graphs below show less edges at each vertex due to overlapping edges in the symmetry projection.
In general, a demicube's elements can be determined from the original n-cube:
- Vertices: Dn,0 = 1/2 Cn,0 = 2n−1
- Edges: Dn,1 = Cn,2 = 1/2 n 2n−2
- Faces: Dn,2 = 4 * Cn,3 = 2/3 n 2n−3
- Cells: Dn,3 = Cn,3 + 23 Cn,4
- Hypercells: Dn,4 = Cn,4 + 24 Cn,5
- ...
- : Dn,''m = Cn'',m + 2m Cn,''m+1
- ...
- Facets: Dn'',n−1 = 2n + 2n−1 -demicubes and
Symmetry group
Orthotopic constructions
Constructions as alternated orthotopes have the same topology, but can be stretched with different lengths in n-axes of symmetry.The rhombic disphenoid is the three-dimensional example as alternated cuboid. It has three sets of edge lengths, and scalene triangle faces.