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Great Circles of the Spherical Hexahedron
The above image shows Great Circles projecting through the vertices of the Hexahedron. The result of this is a network of spherical triangles. It is then from these spherical triangles that an actual model can be made up of the whole sphere. The projection of these triangles onto the surface of the sphere is known as spherical tessellation. One might now ask themselves where does the geometry exist in this topic. In order to make this model one must be able to find the angle measure of all the spherical triangles needed for the spherical model. To learn how to draw the shapes needed to make these spherical triangles it is felt that it is easiest to begin with the cube. Using the diagram shown below, of the cube circumscribed by a sphere, study carefully the shape of the spherical triangle (in red) shown on the surface of the sphere and also, the blue lines (1R, 2R, 0R) projecting from the common centre of the cube and the sphere to the vertices of the spherical triangle.
Image A Quadrirectangular Tetrahedron The surface area of the triangle being projected onto the sphere is one eight of the total surface area of the top face which is broken into eight equal triangles each having a vertex at the centre of the face. The solid triangular polyhedron described in Image A by the blue lines within the cube is called a quadrirectangual tetrahedron because each of its four faces is a right-angled triangle. The whole cube is made up of forty-eight such solids, eight projecting from each face to the centre of the cube.
Image B Five of the forty-eight quadrirectangular tetrahedra contained in a cube are shown here.
Principles of Procedure Referring to Image A it can be seen that Oo is a vertex of the cube. O1 is the mid point of an edge, O2 is an incentre of a face and O3 is the centre of the cube, that is at the same time the centre of the circumscribing sphere. Triangle Oo O1 O2 on the face of the cube can be projected by central or gnomic projection onto the surface of the sphere, generating the spherical triangle Q1 Q2 Q3. Notice that Qo and Oo are the same point. If the cube is now assigned an edge length of e = 2, then half of e equals 1 (one unit length). This is the length of Oo O1.
Image A
It is from the spherical triangle Qo Q1 Q2 that a paper band can be designed for making a spherical model of the cube. Triangle Oo O1 O2 is omitted, and Image C shows how to draw the layout of the orthoscheme and how the angles a, b and c needed for the circular band are derived from it.
Image C
The third side of the spherical triangle Qo Q1 Q2 now follows as shown in Image D and Image E. The spherical model is shown in Image F below.
Layout of circular band for cube
Image D
Circular band folded
Image E
Spherical Model of the Cube
Image F
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Polyhedra & Spherical Geometry Spherical Projection of the Cube
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