Cubic honeycomb


The cubic honeycomb or cubic cellulation is the only proper regular space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space, made up of cubic cells. It has 4 cubes around every edge, and 8 cubes around each vertex. Its vertex figure is a regular octahedron. It is a self-dual tessellation with Schläfli symbol. John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a cubille.

Cartesian coordinates

The Cartesian coordinates of the vertices are:

Related honeycombs

It is part of a multidimensional family of hypercube honeycombs, with Schläfli symbols of the form, starting with the square tiling, in the plane.
It is one of 28 uniform honeycombs using convex uniform polyhedral cells.

Isometries of simple cubic lattices

Simple cubic lattices can be distorted into lower symmetries, represented by lower crystal systems:
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Triclinic
OrthorhombicTetragonalRhombohedralCubic
Unit cellParallelepipedRectangular cuboidSquare cuboidTrigonal
trapezohedron
Cube
Point group
Order
Rotation subgroup
,
Order 2
+,
,
Order 8
+,
,
Order 16
+,
,
Order 6
+,
,
Order 48
+,
Diagram
Space group
Rotation subgroup
Pm
P1
Pmmm
P222
P4/mmm
P422
R3m
R3
Pmm
P432
Coxeter notation-a×b×ca×c-a
Coxeter diagram--

Uniform colorings

There is a large number of uniform colorings, derived from different symmetries. These include:
Coxeter notation
Space group
Coxeter diagramSchläfli symbolPartial
honeycomb
Colors by letters

Pmm

=
1: aaaa/aaaa
=
Fmm
= 2: abba/baab

Pmm
t0,34: abbc/bccd
4,3,4
Pmm
t0,34: abbb/bbba

or
×t2: aaaa/bbbb
t1×2: abba/abba
t×t×4: abcd/abcd
= = t×t×t8: abcd/efgh

Projections

The cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements. The highest symmetry form projects into a triangular tiling. A square symmetry projection forms a square tiling.

Related polytopes and honeycombs

It is related to the regular 4-polytope tesseract, Schläfli symbol, which exists in 4-space, and only has 3 cubes around each edge. It's also related to the order-5 cubic honeycomb, Schläfli symbol, of hyperbolic space with 5 cubes around each edge.
It is in a sequence of polychora and honeycomb with octahedral vertex figures.
It in a sequence of regular polytopes and honeycombs with cubic cells.

Related polytopes

The cubic honeycomb has a lower symmetry as a runcinated cubic honeycomb, with two sizes of cubes. A double symmetry construction can be constructed by placing a small cube into each large cube, resulting in a nonuniform honeycomb with cubes, square prisms, and rectangular trapezoprisms. Its vertex figure is a triangular pyramid with its lateral faces augmented by tetrahedra.

Dual cell
The resulting honeycomb can be alternated to produce another nonuniform honeycomb with regular tetrahedra, two kinds of tetragonal disphenoids, triangular pyramids, and sphenoids. Its vertex figure has C3v symmetry and has 26 triangular faces, 39 edges, and 15 vertices.

Related Euclidean tessellations

The ,, Coxeter group generates 15 permutations of uniform tessellations, 9 with distinct geometry including the alternated cubic honeycomb. The expanded cubic honeycomb is geometrically identical to the cubic honeycomb.
The ,, Coxeter group generates 9 permutations of uniform tessellations, 4 with distinct geometry including the alternated cubic honeycomb.
This honeycomb is one of five distinct uniform honeycombs constructed by the Coxeter group. The symmetry can be multiplied by the symmetry of rings in the Coxeter–Dynkin diagrams:
----

Rectified cubic honeycomb

The rectified cubic honeycomb or rectified cubic cellulation is a uniform space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of octahedra and cuboctahedra in a ratio of 1:1, with a square prism vertex figure.
John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a cuboctahedrille, and its dual an oblate octahedrille.

Projections

The rectified cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements.

Symmetry

There are four uniform colorings for the cells of this honeycomb with reflective symmetry, listed by their Coxeter group, and Wythoff construction name, and the Coxeter diagram below.
Symmetry

,

,

],
Space groupPmm
Fmm
Fmm
F3m
Coloring
Coxeter
diagram
Coxeter
diagram
Vertex figure
Vertex
figure
symmetry
D4h


order 16
D2h


order 8
C4v


order 8
C2v


order 4

This honeycomb can be divided on trihexagonal tiling planes, using the hexagon centers of the cuboctahedra, creating two triangular cupolae. This scaliform honeycomb is represented by Coxeter diagram, and symbol s3, with coxeter notation symmetry .

Related polytopes

A double symmetry construction can be made by placing octahedra on the cuboctahedra, resulting in a nonuniform honeycomb with two kinds of octahedra. The vertex figure is a square bifrustum. The dual is composed of elongated square bipyramids.

Dual cell
----

Truncated cubic honeycomb

The truncated cubic honeycomb or truncated cubic cellulation is a uniform space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of truncated cubes and octahedra in a ratio of 1:1, with an isosceles square pyramid vertex figure.
John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a truncated cubille, and its dual pyramidille.

Projections

The truncated cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements.

Symmetry

There is a second uniform coloring by reflectional symmetry of the Coxeter groups, the second seen with alternately colored truncated cubic cells.
ConstructionBicantellated alternate cubicTruncated cubic honeycomb
Coxeter group,,
=<>
Space groupFmmPmm
Coloring
Coxeter diagram =
Vertex figure

Related polytopes

A double symmetry construction can be made by placing octahedra on the truncated cubes, resulting in a nonuniform honeycomb with two kinds of octahedra and two kinds of tetrahedra. The vertex figure is an octakis square cupola.

Vertex figure

Dual cell
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Bitruncated cubic honeycomb

The bitruncated cubic honeycomb is a space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space made up of truncated octahedra. It has four truncated octahedra around each vertex, in a tetragonal disphenoid vertex figure. Being composed entirely of truncated octahedra, it is cell-transitive. It is also edge-transitive, with 2 hexagons and one square on each edge, and vertex-transitive. It is one of 28 uniform honeycombs.
John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a truncated octahedrille in his Architectonic and catoptric tessellation list, with its dual called an oblate tetrahedrille, also called a disphenoid tetrahedral honeycomb. Although a regular tetrahedron can not tessellate space alone, this dual has identical disphenoid tetrahedron cells with isosceles triangle faces.

Projections

The bitruncated cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements. The highest symmetry form projects into a nonuniform rhombitrihexagonal tiling. A square symmetry projection forms two overlapping truncated square tiling, which combine together as a chamfered square tiling.

Symmetry

The vertex figure for this honeycomb is a disphenoid tetrahedron, and it is also the Goursat tetrahedron for the Coxeter group. This honeycomb has four uniform constructions, with the truncated octahedral cells having different Coxeter groups and Wythoff constructions. These uniform symmetries can be represented by coloring differently the cells in each construction.
Space groupImm Pmm Fmm F3m Fdm
Fibrifold8o:24:22:21o:22+:2
Coxeter group×2
4,3,4
=
=


=
=


=<]>
=

]

×2

=
Coxeter diagram
truncated octahedra1
1:1
:
2:1:1
::
1:1:1:1
:::
1:1
:
Vertex figure
Vertex
figure
symmetry



+
+
Image
Colored by
cell

Related polytopes

Nonuniform variants with symmetry and two types of truncated octahedra can be doubled by placing the two types of truncated octahedra to produce a nonuniform honeycomb with truncated octahedra and hexagonal prisms. Its vertex figure is a C2v-symmetric triangular bipyramid.
This honeycomb can then be alternated to produce another nonuniform honeycomb with pyritohedral icosahedra, octahedra, and tetrahedra. Its vertex figure has C2v symmetry and consists of 2 pentagons, 4 rectangles, 4 isosceles triangles, and 4 scalene triangles.
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Alternated bitruncated cubic honeycomb

The alternated bitruncated cubic honeycomb or bisnub cubic honeycomb is non-uniform, with the highest symmetry construction reflecting an alternation of the uniform bitruncated cubic honeycomb. A lower-symmetry construction involves regular icosahedra paired with golden icosahedra. There are three constructions from three related Coxeter diagrams:,, and. These have symmetry , and ]+ respectively. The first and last symmetry can be doubled as 4,3+,4 and +.
This honeycomb is represented in the boron atoms of the α-rhombihedral crystal. The centers of the icosahedra are located at the fcc positions of the lattice.
Space groupI Pm Fm Fd F23
Fibrifold8−o422o+1o
Coxeter group4,3+,4+]+
Coxeter diagram
Orderdoublefullhalfquarter
double
quarter

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Cantellated cubic honeycomb

The cantellated cubic honeycomb or cantellated cubic cellulation is a uniform space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of rhombicuboctahedra, cuboctahedra, and cubes in a ratio of 1:1:3, with a wedge vertex figure.
John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a 2-RCO-trille, and its dual quarter oblate octahedrille.

Images


It is closely related to the perovskite structure, shown here with cubic symmetry, with atoms placed at the center of the cells of this honeycomb.

Projections

The cantellated cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements.

Symmetry

There is a second uniform colorings by reflectional symmetry of the Coxeter groups, the second seen with alternately colored rhombicuboctahedral cells.
ConstructionTruncated cubic honeycombBicantellated alternate cubic
Coxeter group,
=<>
,
Space groupPmmFmm
Coxeter diagram
Coloring
Vertex figure
Vertex
figure
symmetry

order 2
+
order 1

Related polytopes

A double symmetry construction can be made by placing cuboctahedra on the rhombicuboctahedra, which results in the rectified cubic honeycomb, by taking the triangular antiprism gaps as regular octahedra, square antiprism pairs and zero-height tetragonal disphenoids as components of the cuboctahedron. Other variants result in cuboctahedra, square antiprisms, octahedra, and tetrahedra, with a vertex figure topologically equivalent to a cube with a triangular prism attached to one of its square faces.
----

Quarter oblate octahedrille

The dual of the cantellated cubic honeycomb is called a quarter oblate octahedrille, a catoptric tessellation with Coxeter diagram, containing faces from two of four hyperplanes of the cubic fundamental domain.
It has irregular triangle bipyramid cells which can be seen as 1/12 of a cube, made from the cube center, 2 face centers, and 2 vertices.

Cantitruncated cubic honeycomb

The cantitruncated cubic honeycomb or cantitruncated cubic cellulation is a uniform space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space, made up of truncated cuboctahedra, truncated octahedra, and cubes in a ratio of 1:1:3, with a mirrored sphenoid vertex figure.
John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a n-tCO-trille, and its dual triangular pyramidille.

Images

Four cells exist around each vertex:

Projections

The cantitruncated cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements.

Symmetry

Cells can be shown in two different symmetries. The linear Coxeter diagram form can be drawn with one color for each cell type. The bifurcating diagram form can be drawn with two types of truncated cuboctahedron cells alternating.
ConstructionCantitruncated cubicOmnitruncated alternate cubic
Coxeter group,
=<>
,
Space groupPmm Fmm
Fibrifold4:22:2
Coloring
Coxeter diagram
Vertex figure
Vertex
figure
symmetry

order 2
+
order 1

Triangular pyramidille

The dual of the cantitruncated cubic honeycomb is called a triangular pyramidille, with Coxeter diagram,. This honeycomb cells represents the fundamental domains of symmetry.
A cell can be as 1/24 of a translational cube with vertices positioned: taking two corner, ne face center, and the cube center. The edge colors and labels specify how many cells exist around the edge.

Related polyhedra and honeycombs

It is related to a skew apeirohedron with vertex configuration 4.4.6.6, with the octagons and some of the squares removed. It can be seen as constructed by augmenting truncated cuboctahedral cells, or by augmenting alternated truncated octahedra and cubes.

Related polytopes

A double symmetry construction can be made by placing truncated octahedra on the truncated cuboctahedra, resulting in a nonuniform honeycomb with truncated octahedra, hexagonal prisms, cubes, triangular prisms, and tetrahedra. Its vertex figure is topologically equivalent to the octahedron.

Vertex figure

Dual cell
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Alternated cantitruncated cubic honeycomb

The alternated cantitruncated cubic honeycomb or snub rectified cubic honeycomb contains three types of cells: snub cubes, icosahedra, tetrahedra, and new tetrahedral cells created at the gaps.
Although it is not uniform, constructionally it can be given as Coxeter diagrams or.
Despite being non-uniform, there is a near-miss version with two edge lengths shown below, one of which is around 4.3% greater than the other. The snub cubes in this case are uniform, but the rest of the cells are not.



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Orthosnub cubic honeycomb

The orthosnub cubic honeycomb is constructed by snubbing the truncated octahedra in a way that leaves only rectangles from the cubes. It is not uniform but it can be represented as Coxeter diagram. It has rhombicuboctahedra, icosahedra, and triangular prisms filling the gaps.

Related polytopes

A double symmetry construction can be made by placing icosahedra on the rhombicuboctahedra, resulting in a nonuniform honeycomb with icosahedra, octahedra, triangular prisms, and square pyramids.

Vertex figure

Dual cell
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Runcitruncated cubic honeycomb

The runcitruncated cubic honeycomb or runcitruncated cubic cellulation is a uniform space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of rhombicuboctahedra, truncated cubes, octagonal prisms, and cubes in a ratio of 1:1:3:3, with an isosceles-trapezoidal pyramid vertex figure.
Its name is derived from its Coxeter diagram, with three ringed nodes representing 3 active mirrors in the Wythoff construction from its relation to the regular cubic honeycomb.
John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a 1-RCO-trille, and its dual square quarter pyramidille.

Projections

The runcitruncated cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements.

Related skew apeirohedron

Two related uniform skew apeirohedrons exists with the same vertex arrangement, seen as boundary cells from a subset of cells. One has triangles and squares, and the other triangles, squares, and octagons.

Square quarter pyramidille

The dual to the runcitruncated cubic honeycomb is called a square quarter pyramidille, with Coxeter diagram. Faces exist in 3 of 4 hyperplanes of the , Coxeter group.
Cells are irregular pyramids and can be seen as 1/24 of a cube, using one corner, one mid-edge point, two face centers, and the cube center.

Related polytopes

A double symmetry construction can be made by placing rhombicuboctahedra on the truncated cubes, resulting in a nonuniform honeycomb with rhombicuboctahedra, octahedra, cubes, two kinds of triangular prisms, and tetrahedra. Its vertex figure is topologically equivalent to the augmented triangular prism.

Vertex figure

Dual cell
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Omnitruncated cubic honeycomb

The omnitruncated cubic honeycomb or omnitruncated cubic cellulation is a uniform space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of truncated cuboctahedra and octagonal prisms in a ratio of 1:3, with a phyllic disphenoid vertex figure.
John Horton Conway calls this honeycomb a b-tCO-trille, and its dual eighth pyramidille.

Projections

The omnitruncated cubic honeycomb can be orthogonally projected into the euclidean plane with various symmetry arrangements.

Symmetry

Cells can be shown in two different symmetries. The Coxeter diagram form has two colors of truncated cuboctahedra and octagonal prisms. The symmetry can be doubled by relating the first and last branches of the Coxeter diagram, which can be shown with one color for all the truncated cuboctahedral and octagonal prism cells.
Symmetry, ×2,
Space groupPmm Imm
Fibrifold4:28o:2
Coloring
Coxeter diagram
Vertex figure

Related polyhedra

Two related uniform skew apeirohedron exist with the same vertex arrangement. The first has octagons removed, and vertex configuration 4.4.4.6. It can be seen as truncated cuboctahedra and octagonal prisms augmented together. The second can be seen as augmented octagonal prisms, vertex configuration 4.8.4.8.
4.4.4.6
4.8.4.8

Related polytopes

Nonuniform variants with symmetry and two types of truncated cuboctahedra can be doubled by placing the two types of truncated cuboctahedra on each other to produce a nonuniform honeycomb with truncated cuboctahedra, octagonal prisms, hexagonal prisms, and two kinds of cubes. Its vertex figure is an irregular triangular bipyramid.

Vertex figure

Dual cell
This honeycomb can then be alternated to produce another nonuniform honeycomb with snub cubes, square antiprisms, octahedra, and three kinds of tetrahedra.

Vertex figure
----

Alternated omnitruncated cubic honeycomb

An alternated omnitruncated cubic honeycomb or omnisnub cubic honeycomb can be constructed by alternation of the omnitruncated cubic honeycomb, although it can not be made uniform, but it can be given Coxeter diagram: and has symmetry [4,3,4+. It makes snub cubes from the truncated cuboctahedra, square antiprisms from the octagonal prisms, and creates new tetrahedral cells from the gaps.

Dual alternated omnitruncated cubic honeycomb

A dual alternated omnitruncated cubic honeycomb is a space-filling honeycomb constructed as the dual of the alternated omnitruncated cubic honeycomb.
24 cells fit around a vertex, making a [chiral octahedral symmetry
that can be stacked in all 3-dimensions:
Individual cells have 2-fold rotational symmetry. In 2D orthogonal projection, this looks like a mirror symmetry.

Net

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Bialternatosnub cubic honeycomb

The bialternatosnub cubic honeycomb or runcic cantitruncated cubic honeycomb or runcic cantitruncated cubic cellulation is constructed by removing alternating long rectangles from the octagons and is not uniform, but it can be represented as Coxeter diagram. It has rhombicuboctahedra, snub cubes, two kinds of cubes: square prisms and rectangular trapezoprisms, and triangular prisms filling the gaps.
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Biorthosnub cubic honeycomb

The biorthosnub cubic honeycomb is constructed by removing alternating long rectangles from the octagons orthogonally and is not uniform, but it can be represented as Coxeter diagram. It has rhombicuboctahedra and two kinds of cubes: square prisms and rectangular trapezoprisms.
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Truncated square prismatic honeycomb

The truncated square prismatic honeycomb or tomo-square prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of octagonal prisms and cubes in a ratio of 1:1.
It is constructed from a truncated square tiling extruded into prisms.
It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.
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Snub square prismatic honeycomb

The snub square prismatic honeycomb or simo-square prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of cubes and triangular prisms in a ratio of 1:2.
It is constructed from a snub square tiling extruded into prisms.
It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.
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Snub square antiprismatic honeycomb

A snub square antiprismatic honeycomb can be constructed by alternation of the truncated square prismatic honeycomb, although it can not be made uniform, but it can be given Coxeter diagram: and has symmetry +. It makes square antiprisms from the octagonal prisms, tetrahedra from the cubes, and two tetrahedra from the triangular bipyramids.