5-orthoplex
In five-dimensional geometry, a 5-orthoplex, or 5-cross polytope, is a five-dimensional polytope with 10 vertices, 40 edges, 80 triangle faces, 80 tetrahedron cells, 32 5-cell 4-faces.
It has two constructed forms, the first being regular with Schläfli symbol, and the second with alternately labeled facets, with Schläfli symbol or Coxeter symbol 211.
It is a part of an infinite family of polytopes, called cross-polytopes or orthoplexes. The dual polytope is the 5-hypercube or 5-cube.
Alternate names
- pentacross, derived from combining the family name cross polytope with pente for five in Greek.
- Triacontaditeron - as a 32-facetted 5-polytope.
As a configuration
Cartesian coordinates
for the vertices of a 5-orthoplex, centered at the origin areConstruction
There are three Coxeter groups associated with the 5-orthoplex, one regular, dual of the penteract with the C5 or Coxeter group, and a lower symmetry with two copies of 5-cell facets, alternating, with the D5 or Coxeter group, and the final one as a dual 5-orthotope, called a 5-fusil which can have a variety of subsymmetries.Name | Coxeter diagram | Schläfli symbol | Symmetry | Order | Vertex figure |
regular 5-orthoplex | 3840 | ||||
Quasiregular 5-orthoplex | 1920 | ||||
5-fusil | - | - | - | - | - |
5-fusil | 3840 | ||||
5-fusil | + | 768 | |||
5-fusil | + | 384 | |||
5-fusil | +2 | 192 | |||
5-fusil | 2+ | 128 | |||
5-fusil | +3 | 64 | |||
5-fusil | 5 | 32 |
Other images
The perspective projection of a stereographic projection of the Schlegel diagram of the 5-orthoplex. 10 sets of 4 edges form 10 circles in the 4D Schlegel diagram: two of these circles are straight lines in the stereographic projection because they contain the center of projection. |