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6-cube

6-dimensional hypercube


Summary

6-dimensional hypercube

6-cubeHexeract
[[File:6-cube graph.svg280px]]Orthogonal projectioninside Petrie polygonOrange vertices are doubled, and the center yellow has 4 vertices
Type
Family
Schläfli symbol
Coxeter diagram
5-faces
4-faces
Cells
Faces
Edges
Vertices
Vertex figure
Petrie polygon
Coxeter group
Dual
Properties

In geometry, a 6-cube is a six-dimensional hypercube with 64 vertices, 192 edges, 240 square faces, 160 cubic cells, 60 tesseract 4-faces, and 12 5-cube 5-faces.

It has Schläfli symbol {4,34}, being composed of 3 5-cubes around each 4-face. It can be called a hexeract, a portmanteau of tesseract (the 4-cube) with hex for six (dimensions) in Greek. It can also be called a regular dodeca-6-tope or dodecapeton, being a 6-dimensional polytope constructed from 12 regular facets.

As a configuration

This configuration matrix represents the 6-cube. The rows and columns correspond to vertices, edges, faces, cells, 4-faces and 5-faces. The diagonal numbers say how many of each element occur in the whole 6-cube. The nondiagonal numbers say how many of the column's element occur in or at the row's element.

\begin{bmatrix}\begin{matrix}64 & 6 & 15 & 20 & 15 & 6 \ 2 & 192 & 5 & 10 & 10 & 5 \ 4 & 4 & 240 & 4 & 6 & 4 \ 8 & 12 & 6 & 160 & 3 & 3 \ 16 & 32 & 24 & 8 & 60 & 2 \ 32 & 80 & 80 & 40 & 10 & 12 \end{matrix}\end{bmatrix}

Cartesian coordinates

Cartesian coordinates for the vertices of a 6-cube centered at the origin and edge length 2 are : (±1,±1,±1,±1,±1,±1) while the interior of the same consists of all points (x0, x1, x2, x3, x4, x5) with −1 i

Construction

There are three Coxeter groups associated with the 6-cube, one regular, with the C6 or [4,3,3,3,3] Coxeter group, and a half symmetry (D6) or [33,1,1] Coxeter group. The lowest symmetry construction is based on hyperrectangles or proprisms, cartesian products of lower dimensional hypercubes.

NameCoxeterSchläfliSymmetryOrderRegular 6-cubeQuasiregular 6-cubehyperrectangle
{4,3,3,3,3}[4,3,3,3,3]46080
[3,3,3,31,1]23040
{4,3,3,3}×{}[4,3,3,3,2]7680
{4,3,3}×{4}[4,3,3,2,4]3072
{4,3}2[4,3,2,4,3]2304
{4,3,3}×{}2[4,3,3,2,2]1536
{4,3}×{4}×{}[4,3,2,4,2]768
{4}3[4,2,4,2,4]512
{4,3}×{}3[4,3,2,2,2]384
{4}2×{}2[4,2,4,2,2]256
{4}×{}4[4,2,2,2,2]128
{}6[2,2,2,2,2]64

Projections

Coxeter planeB6B5B4GraphDihedral symmetryCoxeter planeOtherB3B2GraphDihedral symmetryCoxeter planeA5A3GraphDihedral symmetry
[[File:6-cube t0.svg150px]][[File:6-cube t0 B5.svg150px]][[File:4-cube t0.svg150px]]
[12][10][8]
[[Image:6-cube column graph.svg150px]][[File:6-cube t0 B3.svg150px]][[File:6-cube t0 B2.svg150px]]
[2][6][4]
[[File:6-cube t0 A5.svg150px]][[File:6-cube t0 A3.svg150px]]
[6][4]
[[File:Hexeract-q1q4-q2q5-q3q6.gif280px]]
A 3D perspective projection of a hexeract undergoing a triple rotation about the X-W1, Y-W2 and Z-W3 orthogonal planes.

References

  • H.S.M. Coxeter, Regular Polytopes, 1973, 3rd edition, Dover, New York, p. 296, Table I (iii): Regular Polytopes, three regular polytopes in n dimensions (n ≥ 5),

References

  1. (2019). "2019 International Engineering Conference (IEC)".
  2. (February 1988). "An improved projection operation for cylindrical algebraic decomposition of three-dimensional space". Journal of Symbolic Computation.
  3. Coxeter, Regular Polytopes, sec 1.8 Configurations
  4. Coxeter, Complex Regular Polytopes, p.117
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