Octagram

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Template:Short description Template:Regular polygon db Template:Star polygons

In geometry, an octagram is an eight-angled star polygon.

The name octagram combine a Greek numeral prefix, octa-, with the Greek suffix -gram. The -gram suffix derives from γραμμή (grammḗ) meaning "line".[1]

Detail

File:Octagram lengths.svg
A regular octagram with each side length equal to 1

In general, an octagram is any self-intersecting octagon (8-sided polygon).

The regular octagram is labeled by the Schläfli symbol {8/3}, which means an 8-sided star, connected by every third point.

Variations

These variations have a lower dihedral, Dih4, symmetry:

File:Regular truncation 4 1.5.svg
Narrow
File:Regular truncation 4 2.svg
Wide
(45 degree rotation)
File:Isotoxal octagram.png
File:Octagram-in-square.svg
Isotoxal
File:Ancient mapuche flag.svg
An old Flag of Chile contained this octagonal star geometry with edges removed (the Guñelve).
File:Flag of Kölner Rudergesellschaft 1891.svg
The regular octagonal star is very popular as a symbol of rowing clubs in the Cologne Lowland, as seen on the club flag of the Cologne Rowing Association.
File:Star Guñelve.svg
The geometry can be adjusted so 3 edges cross at a single point, like the Auseklis symbol
File:Compass rose en 08p.svg
An 8-point compass rose can be seen as an octagonal star, with 4 primary points, and 4 secondary points.

The symbol Rub el Hizb is a Unicode glyph ۞ Template:Padat U+06DE.

As a quasitruncated square

Deeper truncations of the square can produce isogonal (vertex-transitive) intermediate star polygon forms with equal spaced vertices and two edge lengths. A truncated square is an octagon, t{4}={8}. A quasitruncated square, inverted as {4/3}, is an octagram, t{4/3}={8/3}.[2]

The uniform star polyhedron stellated truncated hexahedron, t'{4,3}=t{4/3,3} has octagram faces constructed from the cube in this way. It may be considered for this reason as a three-dimensional analogue of the octagram.

Isogonal truncations of square and cube
Regular Quasiregular Isogonal Quasiregular
File:Regular quadrilateral.svg
{4}
File:Regular polygon truncation 4 1.svg
t{4}={8}
File:Regular polygon truncation 4 2.svg File:Regular polygon truncation 4 3.svg
t'{4}=t{4/3}={8/3}
Regular Uniform Isogonal Uniform
File:Cube truncation 0.00.png
{4,3}
File:Cube truncation 0.50.png
t{4,3}
File:Cube truncation 3.50.png File:Cube truncation 2.50.png
t'{4,3}=t{4/3,3}

Another three-dimensional version of the octagram is the nonconvex great rhombicuboctahedron (quasirhombicuboctahedron), which can be thought of as a quasicantellated (quasiexpanded) cube, t0,2{4/3,3}.

Star polygon compounds

There are two regular octagrammic star figures (compounds) of the form {8/k}, the first constructed as two squares {8/2}=2{4}, and second as four degenerate digons, {8/4}=4{2}. There are other isogonal and isotoxal compounds including rectangular and rhombic forms.

Regular Isogonal Isotoxal
File:Regular star figure 2(4,1).svg
a{8}={8/2}=2{4}
File:Regular star figure 4(2,1).svg
{8/4}=4{2}
File:Octagram rectangle compound.png File:Octagram crossed-rectangle compound.png File:Octagram rhombic star.png

{8/2} or 2{4}, like Coxeter diagrams Template:CDD + Template:CDD, can be seen as the 2D equivalent of the 3D compound of cube and octahedron, Template:CDD + Template:CDD, 4D compound of tesseract and 16-cell, Template:CDD + Template:CDD and 5D compound of 5-cube and 5-orthoplex; that is, the compound of a n-cube and cross-polytope in their respective dual positions.

Other presentations of an octagonal star

An octagonal star can be seen as a concave hexadecagon, with internal intersecting geometry erased. It can also be dissected by radial lines.

star polygon Concave Central dissections
File:Squared octagonal-star3.svg
Compound 2{4}
File:Squared octagonal-star0.svg
|8/2|
File:Squared octagonal-star1.svg File:Squared octagonal-star4.svg File:Squared octagonal-star2.svg
File:Regular octagram star3.svg
Regular {8/3}
File:Regular octagram star0.svg
|8/3|
File:Regular octagram star1.svg File:Regular octagram star4.svg File:Regular octagram star2.svg
File:Auseklis star3.svg
Isogonal
File:Auseklis star0.svg File:Auseklis star1.svg File:Auseklis star4.svg File:Auseklis star2.svg
File:Square-compass-star3.svg
Isotoxal
File:Square-compass-star0.svg File:Square-compass-star1.svg File:Square-compass-star4.svg File:Square-compass-star2.svg

Other uses

  • In Unicode, the "Eight Spoked Asterisk" symbol is U+2733.
A big round white circle with faint rays around on a brown background. A black irregular shape stands on its left border. A black spot to its left issues six white spikes separated by 60 degrees and two fainter spikes in vertical.
The spikes are specially visible around Jupiter's moon Europa (on the left) in this NIRCam image.
File:JWST diffraction spikes.svg
Edges of the JWST primary mirror segments and spider colour-coded with their corresponding diffraction spikes

See also

Template:Sister project

Usage
Stars generally
Others

References

Template:Reflist

  • Grünbaum, B. and G.C. Shephard; Tilings and patterns, New York: W. H. Freeman & Co., (1987), Template:Isbn.
  • Grünbaum, B.; Polyhedra with Hollow Faces, Proc of NATO-ASI Conference on Polytopes ... etc. (Toronto 1993), ed T. Bisztriczky et al., Kluwer Academic (1994) pp. 43–70.
  • John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, The Symmetries of Things 2008, Template:Isbn (Chapter 26. pp. 404: Regular star-polytopes Dimension 2)

External links

Template:Sister project

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  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. The Lighter Side of Mathematics: Proceedings of the Eugène Strens Memorial Conference on Recreational Mathematics and its History, (1994), Metamorphoses of polygons, Branko Grünbaum
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