Everything about Cube totally explained
» This article is about the geometric shape. For other meanings of the word "cube", see cube (disambiguation).
A
cube is a
three-dimensional solid object bounded by six
square faces, facets or sides, with three meeting at each . The cube can also be called a
regular hexahedron and is one of the five
Platonic solids. It is a special kind of square
prism, of rectangular
parallelepiped and of 3-sided
trapezohedron. The cube is
dual to the
octahedron. It has cubical symmetry (also called
octahedral symmetry). A cube is the three-dimensional case of the more general concept of a
hypercube, which exists in any dimension.
Cartesian coordinates
For a cube centered at the origin, with edges parallel to the axes and with an edge length of 2, the
Cartesian coordinates of the vertices are
» (±1,±1,±1)
while the interior consists of all points (x
0, x
1, x
2) with -1 < x
i < 1.
Formulas
For a cube of edge length
,
As the volume of a cube is the third power of its sides
a×
a×
a,
third powers are called
cubes, by analogy with
squares and second powers.
A cube has the largest volume among
cuboids (rectangular boxes) with a given
surface area. Also, a cube has the largest volume among cuboids with the same total linear size (length + width + height).
Symmetry
The cube has 3 classes of symmetry, which can be represented by
vertex-transitive coloring the faces. The highest
octahedral symmetry O
h has all the faces the same color. The
dihedral symmetry D
4h comes from the cube being a prism, with all four sides being the same color. The lowest symmetry D
2h is also a prismatic symmetry, with sides alternating colors, so there are three colors, paired by opposite sides. Each symmetry form has a different
Wythoff symbol.
(3 colors) | 2 2 2 D2h |
(2 colors) 4 2 | 2 D4h |
(1 color) 3 | 4 2 Oh |
Geometric relations
The cube is unique among the Platonic solids for being able to tile space regularly. It is also unique among the Platonic solids in having faces with an even number of sides and, consequently, it's the only member of that group that's a
zonohedron (every face has point symmetry).
Other dimensions
The analogue of a cube in four-dimensional
Euclidean space has a special name — a
tesseract or (rarely)
hypercube.
The analogue of the cube in
n-dimensional Euclidean space is called a
hypercube or
n-dimensional cube or simply
n-cube. It is also called a
measure polytope.
There are analogues of the cube in lower dimensions too: a
point in dimension 0, a
segment in one dimension and a
square in two dimensions.
Related polyhedra
The vertices of a cube can be grouped into two groups of four, each forming a regular
tetrahedron. These two together form a regular
compound, the
stella octangula. The intersection of the two forms a regular
octahedron. The symmetries of a regular tetrahedron correspond to those of a cube which map each tetrahedron to itself; the other symmetries of the cube map the two to each other.
One such regular tetrahedron has a volume of ⅓ of that of the cube. The remaining space consists of four equal irregular polyhedra with a volume of 1/6 of that of the cube, each.
The
rectified cube is the
cuboctahedron. If smaller corners are cut off we get a polyhedron with 6
octagonal faces and 8 triangular ones. In particular we can get regular octagons (
truncated cube). The
rhombicuboctahedron is obtained by cutting off both corners and edges to the correct amount.
A cube can be inscribed in a
dodecahedron so that each vertex of the cube is a vertex of the dodecahedron and each edge is a diagonal of one of the dodecahedron's faces; taking all such cubes gives rise to the regular
compound of five cubes.
Image:Stella octangula.png|The tetrahedra in the cube (stella octangula)
Image:Cuboctahedron.svg|The rectified cube (cuboctahedron)
Image:Truncatedhexahedron.jpg|Truncated cube
Image:Rhombicuboctahedron.jpg|Rhombicuboctahedron
Image:UC08-3 cubes.png|Compound of three cubes
Image:Alternate truncated cube.png|An alternately truncated cube
All but the last of the figures shown have the same symmetries as the cube (see
octahedral symmetry).
Combinatorial cubes
A different kind of cube is the
cube graph, which is the graph of vertices and edges of the geometrical cube. It is a special case of the
hypercube graph.
An extension is the 3-dimensional
k-ary
Hamming graph, which for
k = 2 is the cube graph.
Graphs of this sort occur in the theory of
parallel processing in computers.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cube'.
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