VERTEX-TRANSITIVE

:''For graph theory, see Vertex-transitive graph.''
In geometry, a polytope (a polygon, polyhedron or tiling, for example) is 'isogonal' or 'vertex-transitive' if all its vertices are the same. That is, each vertex is surrounded by the same kinds of face in the same order, and with the same angles between corresponding faces.
Technically, we say that for any two vertices there exists a symmetry of the polytope mapping the first isometrically onto the second. Other ways of saying this are that the polytope is ''transitive on its vertices'', or that the vertices lie within a single ''symmetry orbit''.
The term 'isogonal' has long been used for polyhedra. 'Vertex-transitive' is a synonym borrowed from modern ideas such as symmetry groups and graph theory.

Contents
Isogonal polygons
Isogonal polyhedra
Isogonal polytopes and tessellations
References
See also
External links

Isogonal polygons


An example ''isogonal'' octagon with D4 symmetry.

All regular polygons and regular star polygons are ''isogonal''.
Some even-sided polygons which alternate two edge lengths, for example rectangle, are ''isogonal''.
All such 2n-gons have dihedral symmetry (Dn, n=2,3,...) with reflection lines across the mid-edge points.

Isogonal polyhedra


Isogonal polyhedra may be classified:

★ ''Regular'' if it is also isohedral (face-transitive) and isotoxal (edge-transitive); this implies that every face is the same kind of regular polygon.

★ ''Quasi-regular'' if it is also isotoxal (edge-transitive) but not isohedral (face-transitive).

★ ''Semi-regular'' if every face is a regular polygon but it is not isohedral (face-transitive) or isotoxal (edge-transitive). (Definition varies among authors; e.g. some exclude solids with dihedral symmetry, or nonconvex solids.)

★ ''Uniform'' if every face is a regular polygon, i.e. it is regular, quasiregular or semi-regular.

★ ''Noble'' if it is also isohedral (face-transitive).
An isogonal polyhedron has a single kind of vertex figure. If the faces are regular (and the polyhedron is thus uniform) it can be represented by a vertex configuration notation sequencing the faces around each vertex.

Isogonal polytopes and tessellations


These definitions can be extended to higher dimensional polytopes and tessellations. Most generally, all uniform polytopes are ''isogonal'', for example, the uniform polychorons and convex uniform honeycombs.
The dual of an isogonal polytope is called an isotope which is transitive on its facets.

References



★ Peter R. Cromwell, ''Polyhedra'', Cambridge University Press 1997, ISBN 9-521-55432-2, p.369 Transitivity

See also



Edge-transitive

Face-transitive

Cell-transitive

External links









Isogonal Kaleidoscopical Polyhedra Vladimir L. Bulatov, Physics Department, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Presented at Mosaic2000, Millennial Open Symposium on the Arts and Interdisciplinary Computing, 21-24 August, 2000, Seattle, WA

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