Regular polyhedra are isohedral (face-transitive), isogonal (vertex-transitive), and isotoxal (edge-transitive).
Quasiregular polyhedra, like the
cuboctahedron and the
icosidodecahedron, are isogonal and isotoxal, but not isohedral. Their duals, including the
rhombic dodecahedron and the
rhombic triacontahedron, are isohedral and isotoxal, but not isogonal. Not every
polyhedron or 2-dimensional
tessellation constructed from
regular polygons is isotoxal. For instance, the
truncated icosahedron (the familiar soccerball) is not isotoxal, as it has two edge types: hexagon-hexagon and hexagon-pentagon, and it is not possible for a symmetry of the solid to move a hexagon-hexagon edge onto a hexagon-pentagon edge. An isotoxal polyhedron has the same
dihedral angle for all edges. The dual of a convex polyhedron is also a convex polyhedron. The dual of a non-convex polyhedron is also a non-convex polyhedron. (By contraposition.) The dual of an isotoxal polyhedron is also an isotoxal polyhedron. (See the
Dual polyhedron article.) There are nine
convex isotoxal polyhedra: the five (
regular)
Platonic solids, the two (
quasiregular) common cores of dual Platonic solids, and their two duals. There are fourteen non-convex isotoxal polyhedra: the four (regular)
Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra, the two (quasiregular) common cores of dual Kepler–Poinsot polyhedra, and their two duals, plus the three quasiregular ditrigonal (3 |
p q) star polyhedra, and their three duals. There are at least five isotoxal polyhedral compounds: the five
regular polyhedral compounds; their five duals are also the five regular polyhedral compounds (or one chiral twin). There are at least five isotoxal polygonal tilings of the Euclidean plane, and infinitely many isotoxal polygonal tilings of the hyperbolic plane, including the Wythoff constructions from the
regular hyperbolic tilings {
p,
q}, and non-right (
p q r) groups. == See also ==