Rhombitrihexagonal tiling

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Template:Short description Template:Uniform tiling stat table In geometry, the rhombitrihexagonal tiling is a semiregular tiling of the Euclidean plane. There are one triangle, two squares, and one hexagon on each vertex. It has Schläfli symbol of rr{3,6}.

John Conway calls it a rhombihexadeltille.[1] It can be considered a cantellated by Norman Johnson's terminology or an expanded hexagonal tiling by Alicia Boole Stott's operational language.

There are three regular and eight semiregular tilings in the plane.

Uniform colorings

There is only one uniform coloring in a rhombitrihexagonal tiling. (Naming the colors by indices around a vertex (3.4.6.4): 1232.)

With edge-colorings there is a half symmetry form (3*3) orbifold notation. The hexagons can be considered as truncated triangles, t{3} with two types of edges. It has Coxeter diagram Template:CDD, Schläfli symbol s2{3,6}. The bicolored square can be distorted into isosceles trapezoids. In the limit, where the rectangles degenerate into edges, a triangular tiling results, constructed as a snub triangular tiling, Template:CDD.

Symmetry [6,3], (*632) [6,3+], (3*3)
Name Rhombitrihexagonal Cantic snub triangular Snub triangular
Image File:Rhombitrihexagonal tiling uniform coloring.png
Uniform face coloring
File:Rhombitrihexagonal tiling snub edge coloring.png
Uniform edge coloring
File:Rhombitrihexagonal tiling snub edge coloring nonuniform.png
Nonuniform geometry
File:Snub triangular tiling with rhombitrihexagonal coloring.png
Limit
Schläfli
symbol
rr{3,6} s2{3,6} s{3,6}
Coxeter
diagram
Template:CDD Template:CDD Template:CDD

Examples

File:Wallpaper group-p6m-4.jpg
From The Grammar of Ornament (1856)
File:Kensington board.svg
The game Kensington
File:Semi-regular-floor-3464.JPG
Floor tiling, Archeological Museum of Seville, Sevilla, Spain
File:Nîmes-Temple de Diane-6.jpg
The Temple of Diana in Nîmes, France
File:0 Mosaïque de Castel Guido - Pal. Massimo 1.JPG
Roman floor mosaic in Castel di Guido

Related tilings

File:Circular rhombitrihexagonal tilng.png
The tiling can be replaced by circular edges, centered on the hexagons as an overlapping circles grid. In quilting it is called Jacks chain.

There is one related 2-uniform tiling, having hexagons dissected into six triangles.[2][3] The rhombitrihexagonal tiling is also related to the truncated trihexagonal tiling by replacing some of the hexagons and surrounding squares and triangles with dodecagons:

1-uniform Dissection 2-uniform dissections
File:1-uniform 6.png
3.4.6.4
File:Regular hexagon.svg
File:Triangular tiling vertfig.png
File:2-uniform 18.png
3.3.4.3.4 & 36
File:D Inset to CH.gif
to CH
Dual Tilings
File:1-uniform 6b.png
3.4.6.4
File:Regular dodecagon.svg
File:Hexagonal cupola flat.svg
File:1-uniform 3.png
4.6.12
File:D Outset to 3.gif
to 3

Circle packing

The rhombitrihexagonal tiling can be used as a circle packing, placing equal diameter circles at the center of every point. Every circle is in contact with four other circles in the packing (kissing number).[4] The translational lattice domain (red rhombus) contains six distinct circles.

File:1-uniform-6-circlepack.svg

Wythoff construction

There are eight uniform tilings that can be based from the regular hexagonal tiling (or the dual triangular tiling).

Drawing the tiles colored as red on the original faces, yellow at the original vertices, and blue along the original edges, there are eight forms, seven topologically distinct. (The truncated triangular tiling is topologically identical to the hexagonal tiling.) Template:Hexagonal tiling table

Symmetry mutations

This tiling is topologically related as a part of sequence of cantellated polyhedra with vertex figure (3.4.n.4), and continues as tilings of the hyperbolic plane. These vertex-transitive figures have (*n32) reflectional symmetry. Template:Expanded small table

Deltoidal trihexagonal tiling

Template:Infobox face-uniform tiling

File:Aperiodic monotile smith 2023.svg
A 2023 discovered aperiodic monotile, solving the Einstein problem, is composed by a collection of 8 kites from the deltoidal trihexagonal tiling

The deltoidal trihexagonal tiling is a dual of the semiregular tiling known as the rhombitrihexagonal tiling. Conway called it a tetrille.[1] The edges of this tiling can be formed by the intersection overlay of the regular triangular tiling and a hexagonal tiling. Each kite face of this tiling has angles 120°, 90°, 60° and 90°. It is one of only eight tilings of the plane in which every edge lies on a line of symmetry of the tiling.[5]

The deltoidal trihexagonal tiling is a dual of the semiregular tiling rhombitrihexagonal tiling.[6] Its faces are deltoids or kites.

File:P5 dual.png

Related polyhedra and tilings

It is one of seven dual uniform tilings in hexagonal symmetry, including the regular duals. Template:Dual hexagonal tiling table

This tiling has face transitive variations, that can distort the kites into bilateral trapezoids or more general quadrilaterals. Ignoring the face colors below, the fully symmetry is p6m, and the lower symmetry is p31m with three mirrors meeting at a point, and threefold rotation points.[7]

Isohedral variations
Symmetry p6m, [6,3], (*632) p31m, [6,3+], (3*3)
Form File:Isohedral tiling p4-41.png File:Isohedral tiling p4-40b.png File:Isohedral tiling p4-40.png
Faces Kite Half regular hexagon Quadrilaterals

This tiling is related to the trihexagonal tiling by dividing the triangles and hexagons into central triangles and merging neighboring triangles into kites.

File:P3 hull.png

The deltoidal trihexagonal tiling is a part of a set of uniform dual tilings, corresponding to the dual of the rhombitrihexagonal tiling.

Symmetry mutations

This tiling is topologically related as a part of sequence of tilings with face configurations V3.4.n.4, and continues as tilings of the hyperbolic plane. These face-transitive figures have (*n32) reflectional symmetry. Template:Dual expanded table

Other deltoidal (kite) tiling

Other deltoidal tilings are possible.

Point symmetry allows the plane to be filled by growing kites, with the topology as a square tiling, V4.4.4.4, and can be created by crossing string of a dream catcher. Below is an example with dihedral hexagonal symmetry.

Another face transitive tiling with kite faces, also a topological variation of a square tiling and with face configuration V4.4.4.4. It is also vertex transitive, with every vertex containing all orientations of the kite face.

Symmetry D6, [6], (*66) pmg, [∞,(2,∞)+], (22*) p6m, [6,3], (*632)
Tiling File:Inscribedstar.svg File:Isohedral tiling p4-53.svg File:Tiling Dual Semiregular V3-4-6-4 Deltoidal Trihexagonal.svg
Configuration V4.4.4.4 V6.4.3.4

See also

Template:Sister project

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". (Chapter 2.1: Regular and uniform tilings, p. 58-65)
  • Template:The Geometrical Foundation of Natural Structure (book) p40
  • John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, The Symmetries of Things 2008, Template:Isbn [1] (Chapter 21, Naming Archimedean and Catalan polyhedra and tilings.
  • Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".
  • Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".
  • Template:KlitzingPolytopes
  • Keith Critchlow, Order in Space: A design source book, 1970, p. 69-61, Pattern N, Dual p. 77-76, pattern 2
  • Dale Seymour and Jill Britton, Introduction to Tessellations, 1989, Template:Isbn, pp. 50–56, dual p. 116

Template:Tessellation

  1. a b Conway, 2008, p288 table
  2. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Order in Space: A design source book, Keith Critchlow, p.74-75, pattern B
  5. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1"..
  6. Script error: No such module "Template wrapper". (See comparative overlay of this tiling and its dual)
  7. Tilings and patterns