The small stellated dodecahedron is constructed by attaching twelve
pentagonal pyramids onto a
regular dodecahedron's faces. Suppose the
pentagrammic faces are considered as five triangular faces. In that case, it shares the same surface topology as the
pentakis dodecahedron, but with much taller
isosceles triangle faces, with the height of the pentagonal
pyramids adjusted so that the five triangles in the pentagram become coplanar. The critical angle is atan(2) above the dodecahedron face. Equivalently, this occurs when the height of the pyramids is equal to \cot(36^\circ)=\sqrt{\frac{5+2\sqrt5}{5}} times the dodecahedron's edge length. Regarding the small stellated dodecahedron has 12 pentagrams as faces, with these pentagrams meeting at 30 edges and 12 vertices, one can compute its
genus using
Euler's formula V - E + F = 2 - 2g and conclude that the small stellated dodecahedron has genus 4. This observation, made by
Louis Poinsot, was initially confusing, but
Felix Klein showed in 1877 that the small stellated dodecahedron could be seen as a
branched covering of the
Riemann sphere by a
Riemann surface of genus 4, with
branch points at the center of each pentagram. This Riemann surface, called
Bring's curve, has the greatest number of symmetries of any Riemann surface of genus 4: the
symmetric group S_5 acts as automorphisms. The
dual polyhedron of a small stellated dodecahedron is the
great dodecahedron which shares the same number of vertices, edges, and faces. == In art and popular cultures ==