Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Compound of eight octahedra with rotational freedom

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Compound of eight octahedra with rotational freedom

This uniform polyhedron compound is a symmetric arrangement of 8 octahedra, considered as triangular antiprisms. It can be constructed by superimposing eight identical octahedra, and then rotating them in pairs about the four axes that pass through the centres of two opposite octahedral faces. Each octahedron is rotated by an equal (and opposite, within a pair) angle θ.

When θ = 0, all eight octahedra coincide. When θ is 60 degrees, the octahedra coincide in pairs yielding (two superimposed copies of) the compound of four octahedra.

Cartesian coordinates

Cartesian coordinates for the vertices of this compound are all the permutations of

(±(1 − cosθ + (√3) sin θ), ±(1 − cosθ − (√3)sinθ), ±(1 + 2 cos θ))

References

Compound of eight octahedra with rotational freedom Wikipedia