Truncated dodecadodecahedron
In geometry, the truncated dodecadodecahedron is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed as U59. It is given a Schläfli symbol It has 54 faces, 180 edges, and 120 vertices. The central region of the polyhedron is connected to the exterior via 20 small triangular holes.
The name truncated dodecadodecahedron is somewhat misleading: truncation of the dodecadodecahedron would produce rectangular faces rather than squares, and the pentagram faces of the dodecadodecahedron would turn into truncated pentagrams rather than decagrams. However, it is the quasitruncation of the dodecadodecahedron, as defined by. For this reason, it is also known as the quasitruncated dodecadodecahedron. Coxeter et al. credit its discovery to a paper published in 1881 by Austrian mathematician Johann Pitsch.
Cartesian coordinates
Cartesian coordinates for the vertices of a truncated dodecadodecahedron are all the triples of numbers obtained by circular shifts and sign changes from the following points :Each of these five points has eight possible sign patterns and three possible circular shifts, giving a total of 120 different points.