e6 = ((√2)/8)ø ̄⁹ = .002325
e3 = ((√2)/8)ø ̄⁶ = .009851
E = ((√2)/8)ø ̄³ = .041731
E3 = ((√2)/8)ø⁰ = .176766
E6 = ((√2)/8)ø³ = .748838
A rhombic triacontahedron with a radius of ø¹, is dubbed
the Super RT. The long diagonal of the rhombic face = 2,
which is R.B.Fuller’s edge for the tetrahedron, octahedron,
cuboctahdron or VE, and the resultant icosahedron from
the Jitterbug transformation.
The volume of the Super RT is 15√2 or 21.213203 =
120E3 = 480E + 120e3 [tetravolumes].
The icosahedron with an edge = 2, inscribes within the
Super RT. It has a volume of 5(√2)ø² = 18.52295. It has
an exact E module volume of 100E3 + 20E = 420E + 100e3.
[tetravolumes]
Another Introduction to Tetravolumesby Kirby Urner(July, 2016)
Kirby, I like your demonstration, it works, but is lacking context. If one is not familiar with triangulation or has every drawn a higher frequency triangle grid understanding the pattern base of multiplication that comes from the structural nature of division, there would be little idea beyond this isolated point location and a vector line demo. With two vectors one can “close the lid” to make a triangle, then see by extending the vectors and drawing parallel lines equally spaced to the “lid” form a figure of higher frequency that gives interesting proportional information from which we can make certain number calculations. Lacking context thus becomes a working formula with little visual understanding of why. For you it is simple having an extensive background in both geometry and computational math that allows necessary connections. For a beginning student this is not a place to start. We are taught the difference between static squares and triangles rather than relationships within spherical packing from which we have a choice of isolating any number of different shapes, relationships, symmetries, volumes, what ever part you want, knowing they are separated aspects interconnected within a single ordered spherical context. Without stacking spheres we cannot expect one to really understand the implications of one point and two lines except as free floating abstract concepts.
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Kirby, I like your demonstration, it works, but is lacking context. If one is not familiar with triangulation or has every drawn a higher frequency triangle grid understanding the pattern base of multiplication that comes from the structural nature of division, there would be little idea beyond this isolated point location and a vector line demo. With two vectors one can “close the lid” to make a triangle, then see by extending the vectors and drawing parallel lines equally spaced to the “lid” form a figure of higher frequency that gives interesting proportional information from which we can make certain number calculations.
Lacking context thus becomes a working formula with little visual understanding of why.
For you it is simple having an extensive background in both geometry and computational math that allows necessary connections. For a beginning student this is not a place to start.
We are taught the difference between static squares and triangles rather than relationships within spherical packing from which we have a choice of isolating any number of different shapes, relationships, symmetries, volumes, what ever part you want, knowing they are separated aspects interconnected within a single ordered spherical context. Without stacking spheres we cannot expect one to really understand the implications of one point and two lines except as free floating abstract concepts.
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I think my mistake might have been in using the word "Introduction" as it might connote leading a rank beginner by the hand. My target audience is more a West Point physics teacher like Dr. Bob Fuller was (different Fuller).
I'll consider changing the title. Beginners should follow links for two hours and watch the cartoons, then maybe read it again. Definitely helps to know trig. I used angular functions between the lines, as when netting out that 2 x 4 x 5 tetrahedron of volume 40. Thanks for the illuminating feedback.
Kirby
Here's something I've billed as "Philosophy for Physics Majors".
It reads differently than "Physics for Poets" which I believe Princeton had, when I was an undergrad there (Class of 1980) and philo major.
Primary link:
http://goo.gl/pWoufe (safe: goes to Jupyter Notebook displayed in Nbviewer)Actual URL (before Google shortening):It's basically showing some foundational stuff by varying definitions that "could have been different" (core spatial geometry concepts).
http://nbviewer.jupyter.org/github/4dsolutions/tetravolumes/blob/master/Computing%20Volumes.ipynb
We might not ever explore the branch, not seeing the trailhead, not knowing we even had the choice.
Philosophy is about revealing such hard-to-find pathways sometimes (unknown unknowns).
If wishing to venture down this trail even further, I'd recommend:
http://worldgame.blogspot.com/2016/07/another-introduction-to-tetravolumes.html(cites this same Notebook)(not by me, curated by me)... along with my Martian Math stuff.Kirby
(there's a Flash-based slide show embedded, pictures from an AAPT conference, and if you have the Flash plug-in installed in your web browser, Adobe may let you know if it's not up to date).