A cube or regular hexahedron is a three-dimensional solid object in geometry. It is an example of a polyhedron, having eight vertices, twelve straight edges of the same length connecting two adjacent vertices, forming six square faces of the same size. It is a type of parallelepiped with pairs of parallel opposite faces having the same shape and size, and more specifically a rhombohedron with its edges having the same length, and a rectangular cuboid with between pairs of intersecting faces and pairs of intersecting edges. It is an example of many classes of polyhedra: Platonic solid, regular polyhedron, parallelohedron, zonohedron, and plesiohedron. The dual polyhedron of a cube is the regular octahedron.
The cube can be represented in many ways, one of which is the graph known as the cubical graph. It can be constructed by using the Cartesian product of graphs. The cube is the three-dimensional hypercube, a family of also including the two-dimensional square and four-dimensional tesseract. A cube with unit side length is the canonical unit of volume in three-dimensional space, relative to which other solid objects are measured. Other related figures involve the construction of polyhedra, space-filling and honeycombs, , as well as cubes in compounds, spherical, and topological space.
The cube was discovered in antiquity, associated with the nature of earth by Plato, for whom the Platonic solids are named. It can be derived differently to create more polyhedra, and it has applications to construct a new polyhedron by attaching others. Other applications include popular culture of toys and games, arts, optical illusions, architectural buildings, as well as natural science and technology.
The cube is one of the five — in which all the are congruent (same shape and size) and the same number of faces meet at each vertex. Every three square faces surrounding a vertex are orthogonality to each other, so the cube is classified as an orthogonal polyhedron. The cube may also be considered a parallelepiped in which the pairs of the opposite faces are congruent (or more specifically a rhombohedron with edges of the same length), and a trigonal trapezohedron since its square faces are the special cases of rhombi.
One special case is the unit cube, so named for measuring a single unit of length along each edge. It follows that each face is a unit square and that the entire figure has a volume of 1 cubic unit. Prince Rupert's cube, named after Prince Rupert of the Rhine, is the largest cube that can pass through a hole cut into the unit cube, despite having sides approximately 6% longer. Such a cube can pass through a copy of itself of the same size or smaller. A geometric problem of doubling the cube—alternatively known as the Delian problem—requires the construction of a cube with a volume twice the original by using only a compass and straightedge. Ancient mathematicians could not solve this problem until the French mathematician Pierre Wantzel proved it was impossible in 1837.
The cube has three types of , or paths on a cube's surface that are locally straight. In other words, they avoid the vertices, follow line segments across the faces that they cross, and form complementary angles on the two incident faces of each edge that they cross. One type lies in a plane parallel to any face of the cube, forming a square, with the length being equal to the perimeter of a face, four times the length of each edge. Another type lies in a plane perpendicular to the long diagonal, forming a regular hexagon; its length is times that of an edge. The third type is a non-planar hexagon.
For a cube whose circumscribed sphere has radius , and for a given point in its three-dimensional space with distances from the cube's eight vertices, it is:
The dual polyhedron can be obtained from each of the polyhedra's vertices tangent to a plane by a process known as polar reciprocation. One property of dual polyhedra is that the polyhedron and its dual share their three-dimensional symmetry point group. In this case, the dual polyhedron of a cube is the regular octahedron, and both of these polyhedra has the same octahedral symmetry.
The cube is face-transitive, meaning its two squares are alike and can be mapped by rotation and reflection. It is vertex-transitive, meaning all of its vertices are equivalent and can be mapped Isometry under its symmetry. It is also edge-transitive, meaning the same kind of faces surround each of its vertices in the same or reverse order, all two adjacent faces have the same dihedral angle. Therefore, the cube is a regular polyhedron. Each vertex is surrounded by three squares, so the cube is by vertex configuration or in a Schläfli symbol.
Cubes are also found in natural science and technology. It is applied to the unit cell of a crystal known as a cubic crystal system. Pyrite is an example of a mineral with a commonly cubic shape, although there are many varied shapes. The radiolarian Lithocubus geometricus, discovered by Ernst Haeckel, has a cubic shape. A historical attempt to unify three physics ideas of relativity, gravitation, and quantum mechanics used the framework of a cube known as a cGh physics. Cubane is a synthetic hydrocarbon consisting of eight carbon arranged at the corners of a cube, with one hydrogen atom attached to each carbon atom.
Other technological cubes include the spacecraft device CubeSat, and thermal radiation demonstration device Leslie cube. Cubical grids are usual in three-dimensional Cartesian coordinate systems. In computer graphics, Marching cubes divides the input volume into a discrete set of cubes known as the unit on isosurface, and the faces of a cube can be used for Cube mapping.
The are five polyhedra known since antiquity. The set is named for Plato who, in his dialogue Timaeus, attributed these solids to nature. One of them, the cube, represented the classical element of earth because of its stability. Euclid's Elements defined the Platonic solids, including the cube, and showed how to find the ratio of the circumscribed sphere's diameter to the edge length. Following Plato's use of the regular polyhedra as symbols of nature, Johannes Kepler in his Harmonices Mundi sketched each of the Platonic solids; he decorated the cube's side with a tree. In his Mysterium Cosmographicum, Kepler also proposed that the ratios between sizes of the orbits of the planets are the ratios between the sizes of the inscribed sphere and circumscribed spheres of the Platonic solids. That is, if the orbits are great circles on spheres, the sphere of Mercury is tangent to a regular octahedron, whose vertices lie on the sphere of Venus, which is in turn tangent to a regular icosahedron, within the sphere of Earth, within a regular dodecahedron, within the sphere of Mars, within a regular tetrahedron, within the sphere of Jupiter, within a cube, within the sphere of Saturn. In fact, the orbits are not circles but ellipses (as Kepler himself later showed), and these relations are only approximate.
In analytic geometry, a cube may be constructed using the Cartesian coordinate systems. 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 . Its interior consists of all points with for all . A cube's surface with center and edge length of is the locus of all points such that
The cube is a Hanner polytope, because it can be constructed by using the Cartesian product of three line segments. Its dual polyhedron, the regular octahedron, is constructed by the direct sum of three line segments.
The cubical graph is a special case of hypercube graph or cube—denoted as —because it can be constructed by using the Cartesian product of graphs: two graphs connecting the pair of vertices with an edge to form a new graph. In the case of the cubical graph, it is the product of two ; roughly speaking, it is a graph resembling a square. In other words, the cubical graph is constructed by connecting each vertex of two squares with an edge. Notationally, the cubical graph is . Like any hypercube graph, it has a cycle which visits Hamiltonian path, and it is also an example of a unit distance graph.
The cubical graph is bipartite graph, meaning every independent set of four vertices can be Disjoint set and the edges connected in those sets. However, every vertex in one set cannot connect all vertices in the second, so this bipartite graph is not complete. It is an example of both a crown graph and a bipartite Kneser graph.
The cube has a Dehn invariant of zero, meaning that cubes can achieve a honeycomb. It is also a space-filling tile in three-dimensional space in which the construction begins by attaching a polyhedron onto its faces without leaving a gap. The cube is a plesiohedron, a special kind of space-filling polyhedron that can be defined as the Voronoi cell of a symmetric Delone set. The plesiohedra include the parallelohedra, which can be translated without rotating to fill a space in which each face of any of its copies is attached to a like face of another copy. There are five kinds of parallelohedra, one of which is the cuboid. Every three-dimensional parallelohedron is a zonohedron, a centrally symmetric polyhedron whose faces are Zonogon. In the case of the cube, it can be represented as a cell. Some honeycombs have cubes as the only cells; one example is the cubic honeycomb, the only regular honeycomb in Euclidean three-dimensional space, which has four cubes around each edge.
The spherical cube represents the spherical polyhedron, which can be modeled by the arc of , creating bounds as the edges of a spherical square. Hence, the spherical cube consists of six spherical squares with 120° interior angles on each vertex. It has vector equilibrium, meaning that the distance from the centroid and each vertex is the same as the distance from that and each edge. Its dual is the spherical octahedron.
The topological object three-dimensional torus is a topological space defined to be homeomorphic to the Cartesian product of three circles. It can be represented as a three-dimensional model of the cube shape.
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