Bilbirothawroid (EntityClass, 12)

From Hi.gher. Space

(Difference between revisions)
(4D: hmm, the J92 crown jewel may not be valid after all, need to verify)
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* [[Snub disphenoid]] (J84),
* [[Snub disphenoid]] (J84),
* [[Snub square antiprism]] (J85),
* [[Snub square antiprism]] (J85),
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* [[Sphenocorona]] (J86) and its augmented variant J87,
+
* [[Sphenocorona]] (J86),
 +
* [[Augmented sphenocorona]] (J87),
* [[Sphenomegacorona]] (J88),
* [[Sphenomegacorona]] (J88),
* [[Hebesphenomegacorona]] (J89),
* [[Hebesphenomegacorona]] (J89),

Revision as of 20:37, 6 February 2014

Crown jewels are a catch-all term for unusual CRF polytopes with unique structures that cannot be obtained from the uniform polytopes or other simpler CRFs by simple "cut-and-paste" operations.

3D

They are the unusual Johnson solids at the end of Johnson's list:

4D

So far, the following crown jewels have been discovered:

  • snubdis antiprism (cube || icosahedron): a crown jewel discovered by Klitzing and included in his list of segmentochora. It is considered a crown jewel because it involves the non-obvious placement of two polyhedra of different symmetry groups in parallel hyperplanes.
  • The non-icosahedral ursachora are arguably crown jewels as well, since they cannot be derived from the uniform polychora by simple "cut-and-paste" operations, and their construction was non-obvious until Wendy first constructed the icosahedral variant (which happens to be a diminishing of the hydrochoron).
  • The castellated rhodoperihedral prism: an unusual prism-like CRF discovered by Quickfur on February 4, 2014, consisting of two parallel rhodoperihedra sandwiching 30 bilunabirotundae, 40 tetrahedra, and 24 pentagonal pyramids. It also has a Stott-expanded variant, first suggested by student91, consisting of two parallel rhodopantohedra, 30 bilunabirotundae, 40 triangular prisms, 24 pentagonal cupolae, and 72 pentagonal prisms.
  • (TENTATIVE: to be confirmed) An unusual hydrochoron luna that contains two triangular hebesphenocorona (J92) cells at a 60° dichoral angle to each other, incompletely constructed by Quickfur on February 5, 2014, and completed by Klitzing the following day. A 120° variant is conjectured to exist, though it has not been proven yet.

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