Uniform 6-polytope
In six-dimensional geometry, a uniform 6-polytope is a six-dimensional uniform polytope. A uniform polypeton is vertex-transitive, and all facets are uniform 5-polytopes.
The complete set of convex uniform 6-polytopes has not been determined, but most can be made as Wythoff constructions from a small set of symmetry groups. These construction operations are represented by the permutations of rings of the Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams. Each combination of at least one ring on every connected group of nodes in the diagram produces a uniform 6-polytope.
The simplest uniform polypeta are regular polytopes: the 6-simplex, the 6-cube , and the 6-orthoplex .
History of discovery
- Regular polytopes:
- * 1852: Ludwig Schläfli proved in his manuscript Theorie der vielfachen Kontinuität that there are exactly 3 regular polytopes in 5 or more dimensions.
- Convex semiregular polytopes:
- * 1900: Thorold Gosset enumerated the list of nonprismatic semiregular convex polytopes with regular facets in his publication On the Regular and Semi-Regular Figures in Space of n Dimensions.
- Convex uniform polytopes:
- * 1940: The search was expanded systematically by Harold [Scott MacDonald Coxeter|H.S.M. Coxeter] in his publication Regular and Semi-Regular Polytopes.
- Nonregular uniform star polytopes:
- * Ongoing: Jonathan Bowers and other researchers search for other non-convex uniform 6-polytopes, with a current count of 41348 known uniform 6-polytopes outside infinite families, excluding the prisms of the uniform 5-polytopes. The list is not proven complete.
Uniform 6-polytopes by fundamental Coxeter groups
There are four fundamental reflective symmetry groups which generate 153 unique uniform 6-polytopes.
Coxeter-Dynkin diagram correspondences between families and higher symmetry within diagrams. Nodes of the same color in each row represent identical mirrors. Black nodes are not active in the correspondence. |
Uniform prismatic families
Uniform prismThere are 6 categorical uniform prisms based on the uniform 5-polytopes.
Uniform duoprism
There are 11 categorical uniform duoprismatic families of polytopes based on Cartesian products of lower-dimensional uniform polytopes. Five are formed as the product of a uniform 4-polytope with a regular polygon, and six are formed by the product of two uniform polyhedra:
Uniform triaprism
There is one infinite family of uniform triaprismatic families of polytopes constructed as a Cartesian products of three regular polygons. Each combination of at least one ring on every connected group produces a uniform prismatic 6-polytope.
Enumerating the convex uniform 6-polytopes
- Simplex family: A6 -
- * 35 uniform 6-polytopes as permutations of rings in the group diagram, including one regular:
- *# - 6-simplex -
- Hypercube/orthoplex family: B6 -
- * 63 uniform 6-polytopes as permutations of rings in the group diagram, including two regular forms:
- *# — 6-cube -
- *# — 6-orthoplex, -
- Demihypercube D6 family: -
- * 47 uniform 6-polytopes as permutations of rings in the group diagram, including:
- *#, 121 '6-demicube - ; also as h,
- *#, 211 6-orthoplex -, a half symmetry form of.
- Semiregular [k 21 polytope|E6] family: -
- * 39 uniform 6-polytopes as permutations of rings in the group diagram, including:
- *#, 221 -
- *#, 122' -
In addition, there are 57 uniform 6-polytope constructions based on prisms of the uniform 5-polytopes: , , , excluding the penteract prism as a duplicate of the hexeract.
In addition, there are infinitely many uniform 6-polytope based on:
- Duoprism prism families: , , .
- Duoprism families: , , .
- Triaprism family: .
The A6 family
All 35 are enumerated below. They are named by Norman Johnson from the Wythoff construction operations upon regular 6-simplex. Bowers-style acronym names are given in parentheses for cross-referencing.
The A6 family has symmetry of order 5040.
The coordinates of uniform 6-polytopes with 6-simplex symmetry can be generated as permutations of simple integers in 7-space, all in hyperplanes with normal vector.
The B6 family
There are 63 forms based on all permutations of the Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams with one or more rings.The B6 family has symmetry of order 46080.
They are named by Norman Johnson from the Wythoff construction operations upon the regular 6-cube and 6-orthoplex. Bowers names and acronym names are given for cross-referencing.
The D6 family
The D6 family has symmetry of order 23040.This family has 3×16−1=47 Wythoffian uniform polytopes, generated by marking one or more nodes of the D6 Coxeter-Dynkin diagram. Of these, 31 are repeated from the B6 family and 16 are unique to this family. The 16 unique forms are enumerated below. Bowers-style acronym names are given for cross-referencing.
The E6 family
There are 39 forms based on all permutations of the Coxeter-Dynkin diagrams with one or more rings. Bowers-style acronym names are given for cross-referencing. The E6 family has symmetry of order 51,840.Triaprisms
Uniform triaprisms, ××, form an infinite class for all integers p,''q,r''>2. ×× makes a lower symmetry form of the 6-cube.The extended f-vector is **=.
Non-Wythoffian 6-polytopes
In 6 dimensions and above, there are an infinite amount of non-Wythoffian convex uniform polytopes: the Cartesian product of the grand antiprism in 4 dimensions and any regular polygon in 2 dimensions. It is not yet proven whether or not there are more.Regular and uniform honeycombs
There are four fundamental affine Coxeter groups and 27 prismatic groups that generate regular and uniform tessellations in 5-space:Regular and uniform honeycombs include:
- There are 12 unique uniform honeycombs, including:
- * 5-simplex honeycomb
- * Truncated 5-simplex honeycomb
- * Omnitruncated 5-simplex honeycomb
- There are 35 uniform honeycombs, including:
- * Regular hypercube honeycomb of Euclidean 5-space, the 5-cube honeycomb, with symbols, =
- There are 47 uniform honeycombs, 16 new, including:
- * The uniform alternated hypercube honeycomb, 5-demicubic honeycomb, with symbols h, = =
- , : There are 20 unique ringed permutations, and 3 new ones. Coxeter calls the first one a quarter 5-cubic honeycomb, with symbols q, =. The other two new ones are =, =.
Regular and uniform hyperbolic honeycombs
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