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CROSS-POLYTOPE

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In geometry, a 'cross-polytope', or 'orthoplex', or 'hyperoctahedron', is a regular, convex polytope that exists in any number of dimensions. The vertices of a cross-polytope consist of all permutations of (±1, 0, 0, …, 0). The cross-polytope is the convex hull of its vertices. (Note: some authors define a cross-polytope only as the boundary of this region.)
The ''n''-dimensional cross-polytope can also be defined as the closed unit ball in the 1-norm on 'R'''n'':
:{xinmathbb R^n : |x|_1 le 1}.
In 1 dimension the cross-polytope is simply the line segment [−1, +1], in 2 dimensions it is a square (or diamond) with vertices {(±1, 0), (0, ±1)}. In 3 dimensions it is an octahedron—one of the five regular polyhedra known as the Platonic solids. Higher-dimensional cross-polytopes are generalizations of these.
A 4-dimensional cross-polytope
2 dimensions
square
3 dimensions
octahedron
4 dimensions
16-cell

The cross-polytope is the dual polytope of the hypercube. The 1-skeleton of a ''n''-dimensional cross-polytope is a Turán graph ''T''(2''n'',''n'').

Contents
4 dimensions
Higher dimensions
See also
Reference
External links

4 dimensions


The 4-dimensional cross-polytope also goes by the name 'hexadecachoron' or '16-cell'. It is one of six regular convex polychora. These polychora were first described by the Swiss mathematician Ludwig Schläfli in the mid-19th century.

Higher dimensions


The 'cross polytope' family is the first of three regular polytope families, labeled by Coxeter as ''βn'', the other two being the hypercube family, labeled as ''γn'', and the simplices, labeled as ''αn''. A fourth family, the infinite tessellation of hypercubes he labeled as ''δn''.
The ''n''-dimensional cross-polytope has 2''n'' vertices, and 2''n'' facets (''n''−1 dimensional components) all of which are ''n''−1 simplices. The vertex figures are all ''n''−1 cross-polytopes. The Schläfli symbol of the cross-polytope is {3,3,…,3,4}.
The number of ''k''-dimensional components (vertices, edges, faces, …, facets) in an ''n''-dimensional cross-polytope is given by (see binomial coefficient):
:2^{k+1}{n choose {k+1}}
A two dimensional graph of the edges of the ''n''-dimensional cross-polytope can be constructed by drawing 2n vertices on a circle and connecting all pairs of vertices except for vertices exactly on opposite sides of the circle. (These unattached pairs represent the vertex pairs on opposite directions of one coordinate axis of the polytope.) To put this more abstractly, the graph is the complement of a matching of ''n'' edges.
{| class="prettytable"
|+
Cross-polytope elements
|-
! n
n
!k11
! Graph
! Name(s)
!Schläfli symbol and
Coxeter-Dynkin
diagrams

! Vertices
! Edges
! Faces
! Cells
! ''4''-faces
! ''5''-faces
! ''6''-faces
! ''7''-faces
! ''8''-faces
|-
| 1
1
|
|

| Line segment
1-cross-polytope
|{}
CDW_ring.png

| 2
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|-
| 2
2
| -111
|

| 'Bicross'
square
2-cross-polytope
|{4} = {}x{}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD_ring.png
CD 2.png
CD ring.png

| 4
| 4
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|-
| 3
3
|011
|

| 'Tricross'
octahedron
3-cross-polytope
|{3,4} = t1{3,3}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD_downbranch-10.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png

| 6
| 12
| 8
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|-
| 4
4
|111
|

| 'Tetracross'
16-cell
hexadecachoron
4-cross-polytope
|{3,3,4} = {31,1,1}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD ring.png
CD 3b.png
CD_downbranch-00.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png

| 8
| 24
| 32
| 16
|  
|  
|  
|  
|  
|-
| 5
5
|211
|

| Pentacross'
'triacontakaidi-5-tope'
5-cross-polytope
|{33,4} = {32,1,1}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD ring.png
CD 3b.png
CD_dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_downbranch-00.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png

| 10
| 40
| 80
| 80
| 32
|  
|  
|  
|  
|-
| 6
6
|311
|

| Hexacross
'hexacontatetra-6-tope'
6-cross-polytope
|{34,4} = {33,1,1}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD ring.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_downbranch-00.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png

| 12
| 60
| 160
| 240
| 192
| 64
|  
|  
|  
|-
| 7
7
|411
|

| Heptacross
'hecticosiocta-7-tope'
7-cross-polytope
|{35,4} = {34,1,1}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD ring.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_downbranch-00.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png

| 14
| 84
| 280
| 560
| 672
| 448
| 128
|  
|  
|-
| 8
8
|511
|

| Octacross
'dihectapentacontahexa-8-tope'
8-cross-polytope
|{36,4} = {35,1,1}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD ring.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_downbranch-00.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png

| 16
| 112
| 448
| 1120
| 1792
| 1792
| 1024
| 256
|  
|-
| 9
9
|611
|

| Enneacross
'pentahectadodeca-9-tope'
9-cross-polytope
|{37,4} = {36,1,1}
CDW_ring.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_3b.png
CDW_dot.png
CDW_4.png
CDW_dot.png

CD ring.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_dot.png
CD 3b.png
CD_downbranch-00.png
CD 3b.png
CD dot.png

| 18
| 144
| 672
| 2016
| 4032
| 5376
| 4608
| 2304
| 512
|}

See also



List of regular polytopes

Reference



Regular Polytopes, , H. S. M., Coxeter, Dover Publications, 1973, ISBN 0-486-61480-8 p.296, Table I (iii): Regular Polytopes, three regular polytopes in n-dimensions (n>=5)

External links





Polytope Viewer (Click to select cross polytope.)



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