16-cell honeycomb

16-cell honeycomb

Perspective projection: the first layer of adjacent 16-cell facets.
TypeRegular 4-space honeycomb
Uniform 4-honeycomb
FamilyAlternated hypercube honeycomb
Schläfli symbol{3,3,4,3}
Coxeter-Dynkin diagram



4-face type{3,3,4}
Cell type{3,3}
Face type{3}
Edge figurecube
Vertex figure
24-cell
Coxeter group = [3,3,4,3]
Dual{3,4,3,3}
Propertiesvertex-transitive, edge-transitive, face-transitive, cell-transitive, 4-face-transitive

In four-dimensional Euclidean geometry, the 16-cell honeycomb is one of the three regular space-filling tessellations (or honeycombs) in Euclidean 4-space. The other two are its dual the 24-cell honeycomb, and the tesseractic honeycomb. This honeycomb is constructed from 16-cell facets, three around every face. It has a 24-cell vertex figure.

This vertex arrangement or lattice is called the B4, D4, or F4 lattice.[1][2]

Alternate names

Coordinates

As a regular honeycomb, {3,3,4,3}, it has a 2-dimensional analogue, {3,6}, and as an alternated form (the demitesseractic honeycomb, h{4,3,3,4}) it is related to the alternated cubic honeycomb.

Vertices can be placed at all integer coordinates (i,j,k,l), such that the sum of the coordinates is even.

D4 lattice

The vertex arrangement of the 16-cell honeycomb is called the D4 lattice or F4 lattice.[2] The vertices of this lattice are the centers of the 3-spheres in the densest known packing of equal spheres in 4-space;[3] its kissing number is 24, which is also the same as the kissing number in R4, as proved by Oleg Musin in 2003.[4][5]

The D+
4
lattice (also called D2
4
) can be constructed by the union of two D4 lattices, and is identical to the tesseractic honeycomb:[6]

= =

This packing is only a lattice for even dimensions. The kissing number is 23 = 8, (2n – 1 for n < 8, 240 for n = 8, and 2n(n – 1) for n > 8).[7]

The D*
4
lattice (also called D4
4
and C2
4
) can be constructed by the union of all four D4 lattices, but it is identical to the D4 lattice: It is also the 4-dimensional body centered cubic, the union of two 4-cube honeycombs in dual positions.[8]

= = .

The kissing number of the D*
4
lattice (and D4 lattice) is 24[9] and its Voronoi tessellation is a 24-cell honeycomb, , containing all rectified 16-cells (24-cell) Voronoi cells, or .[10]

Symmetry constructions

There are three different symmetry constructions of this tessellation. Each symmetry can be represented by different arrangements of colored 16-cell facets.

Name Coxeter group Schläfli symbol Coxeter diagram Vertex figure
Symmetry
Facets/verf
16-cell honeycomb = [3,3,4,3]{3,3,4,3}
[3,4,3], order 1152
24: 16-cell
4-demicube honeycomb = [31,1,3,4]= h{4,3,3,4} =
[3,3,4], order 384
16+8: 16-cell
= [31,1,1,1]{3,31,1,1}
= h{4,3,31,1}
=
[31,1,1], order 192
8+8+8: 16-cell

Related honeycombs

It is related to the regular hyperbolic 5-space 5-orthoplex honeycomb, {3,3,3,4,3}, with 5-orthoplex facets, the regular 4-polytope 24-cell, {3,4,3} with octahedral (3-orthoplex) cell, and cube {4,3}, with (2-orthoplex) square faces.

This honeycomb is one of 20 uniform honeycombs constructed by the Coxeter group, all but 3 repeated in other families by extended symmetry, seen in the graph symmetry of rings in the Coxeter–Dynkin diagrams. The 20 permutations are listed with its highest extended symmetry relation:

See also

Regular and uniform honeycombs in 4-space:

Notes

  1. http://www.math.rwth-aachen.de/~Gabriele.Nebe/LATTICES/F4.html
  2. 1 2 http://www.math.rwth-aachen.de/~Gabriele.Nebe/LATTICES/D4.html
  3. Conway and Sloane, Sphere packings, lattices, and groups, 1.4 n-dimensional packings, p.9
  4. Conway and Sloane, Sphere packings, lattices, and groups, 1.5 Sphere packing problem summary of results. , p.12
  5. O. R. Musin (2003). "The problem of the twenty-five spheres". Russ. Math. Surv. 58: 794–795. doi:10.1070/RM2003v058n04ABEH000651.
  6. Conway and Sloane, Sphere packings, lattices, and groups, 7.3 The packing D3+, p.119
  7. Conway and Sloane, Sphere packings, lattices, and groups, p. 119
  8. Conway and Sloane, Sphere packings, lattices, and groups, 7.4 The dual lattice D3*, p.120
  9. Conway and Sloane, Sphere packings, lattices, and groups, p. 120
  10. Conway and Sloane, Sphere packings, lattices, and groups, p. 466

References

Fundamental convex regular and uniform honeycombs in dimensions 3–10 (or 2-9)
Family / /
Uniform tiling {3[3]} δ3 hδ3 qδ3 Hexagonal
Uniform convex honeycomb {3[4]} δ4 hδ4 qδ4
Uniform 5-honeycomb {3[5]} δ5 hδ5 qδ5 24-cell honeycomb
Uniform 6-honeycomb {3[6]} δ6 hδ6 qδ6
Uniform 7-honeycomb {3[7]} δ7 hδ7 qδ7 222
Uniform 8-honeycomb {3[8]} δ8 hδ8 qδ8 133331
Uniform 9-honeycomb {3[9]} δ9 hδ9 qδ9 152251521
Uniform 10-honeycomb {3[10]} δ10 hδ10 qδ10
Uniform n-honeycomb {3[n]} δn hδn qδn 1k22k1k21
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