English
Adjective
tetrahedral
- in the shape of a tetrahedron
- having four faces, four
apices and six edges
A tetrahedron (plural: tetrahedra) is a
polyhedron composed of four
triangular faces, three
of which meet at each
vertex.
A regular tetrahedron is one in which the four triangles are
regular, or "equilateral", and is one of the
Platonic
solids.
The tetrahedron is one kind of
pyramid, the second most common
type; a pyramid has a flat base, and triangular faces above it, but
the base can be of any polygonal shape, not just square or
triangular.
Like all
convex
polyhedra, a tetrahedron can be folded from a single sheet of
paper.
Formulas for regular tetrahedron
For a regular tetrahedron of edge length a: Note
that with respect to the base plane the
slope of a face ( 2 \sqrt ) is
twice that of an edge ( \sqrt ), corresponding to the fact that the
horizontal distance covered from the base to the
apex
along an edge is twice that along the
median of
a face. In other words, if C is the
centroid of the base, the
distance from C to a vertex of the base is twice that from C to the
midpoint of an edge of the base. This follows from the fact that
the medians of a triangle intersect at its centroid, and this point
divides each of them in two segments, one of which is twice as long
as the other (see
proof).
Volume of any tetrahedron
The volume of any tetrahedron is
given by the pyramid volume formula:
where A is the area of the base and h the height
from the base to the apex. This applies for each of the four
choices of the base, so the distances from the apexes to the
opposite faces are inversely proportional to the areas of these
faces.
For a tetrahedron with vertices a = (a1, a2, a3),
b = (b1, b2, b3), c = (c1, c2, c3), and d = (d1, d2, d3), the
volume is (1/6)·|
det(a−b,
b−c, c−d)|, or any other combination of pairs
of vertices that form a simply connected
graph. This
can be rewritten using a
dot product
and a
cross
product, yielding
If the origin of the coordinate system is chosen
to coincide with vertex d, then d = 0, so
- V = \frac ,
where a, b, and c represent three edges that meet
at one vertex, and \mathbf \cdot (\mathbf \times \mathbf) is a
scalar
triple product. Comparing this formula with that used to
compute the volume of a
parallelepiped, we
conclude that the volume of a tetrahedron is equal to 1/6 of the
volume of any parallelepiped which shares with it three converging
edges.
It should be noted that the triple scalar can be
represented by the following determinants:
- 6 \cdot \mathbf =\begin
\mathbf & \mathbf & \mathbf
\end or 6 \cdot \mathbf
=\begin \mathbf \\ \mathbf \\ \mathbf \end
where \mathbf = (a_1,a_2,a_3) \,
is expressed as a row or column vector
etc.
- 36 \cdot \mathbf =\begin
\mathbf & \mathbf \cdot
\mathbf & \mathbf \cdot \mathbf \\ \mathbf \cdot \mathbf &
\mathbf & \mathbf \cdot \mathbf \\ \mathbf \cdot \mathbf &
\mathbf \cdot \mathbf & \mathbf \end where
\mathbf \cdot \mathbf = ab\cos
etc.
If we are given only the distances between the
vertices of any tetrahedron, then we can compute its volume using
the formula:
- 288 \cdot V^2 =
\begin 0 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \\
1 & 0 & d_^2 & d_^2 & d_^2 \\ 1 & d_^2 & 0
& d_^2 & d_^2 \\ 1 & d_^2 & d_^2 & 0 & d_^2
\\ 1 & d_^2 & d_^2 & d_^2 & 0 \end.
If the determinant's value is negative this means
we can not construct a tetrahedron with the given distances between
the vertices.
Distance between the edges
Any two opposite edges of a
tetrahedron lie on two
skew lines. If
the closest pair of points between these two lines are points in
the edges, they define the distance between the edges; otherwise,
the distance between the edges equals that between one of the
endpoints and the opposite edge.
Three dimensional properties of a generalized
tetrahedron
As with triangle geometry, there is a similar set
of three dimensional geometric properties for a tetrahedron. A
generalised tetrahedron has an insphere, circumsphere, medial
tetrahedron and exspheres. It has respective centers such as
incenter, circumcenter, excenters,
Spieker
center and points such as a centroid. However there is,
generally, no orthocenter in the sense of intersecting altitudes.
There is an equivalent sphere to the triangular
nine
point circle that is the circumsphere of the medial
tetrahedron. However its circumsphere does not, generally, pass
through the base points of the altitudes of the reference
tetrahedron.
To resolve these inconsistencies, a substitute
center known as the Monge point that always exists for a
generalized tetrahedron is introduced. This point was first
identified by
Gaspard
Monge. For tetrahedra where the altitudes do intersect, the
Monge point and the orthocenter coincide. The Monge point is define
as the point where the six midplanes of a tetrahedron intersect. A
midplane is defined as a plane that is orthogonal to an edge
joining any two vertices that also contains the centroid of an
opposite edge formed by joining the other two vertices.
An orthogonal line dropped from the Monge point
to any face is coplanar with two other orthogonal lines to the same
face. The first is an altitude dropped from a corresponding vertex
to the chosen face. The second is an orthogonal line to the chosen
face that passes through the orthocenter of that face. This
orthogonal line through the Monge point lies mid way between the
altitude and the orthocentric orthogonal line.
The Monge point, centroid and circumcenter of a
tetrahedron are colinear and form the Euler line of the
tetrahedron. However, unlike the triangle, the centroid of a
tetrahedron lies at the midpoint of its Monge point and
circumcenter.
There is an equivalent sphere to the triangular
nine point circle for the generalized tetrahedron. It is the
circumsphere of its medial tetrahedron. It is a twelve point sphere
centered at the circumcenter of the medial tetrahedron. By
definition it passes through the centroids of the four faces of the
reference tetrahedron. It passes through four substitute Euler
points that are located at a distance of 1/3 of the way from M, the
Monge point, toward each of the four vertices. Finally it passes
through the four base points of orthogonal lines dropped from each
Euler point to the face not containing the vertex that generated
the Euler point.
If T represents this twelve point center then it
also lies on the Euler line, unlike its triangular counterpart, the
center lies 1/3 of the way from M, the Monge point towards the
circumcenter. Also an orthogonal line through T to a chosen face is
coplanar with two other orthogonal lines to the same face. The
first is an orthogonal line passing through the corresponding Euler
point to the chosen face. The second is an orthogonal line passing
through the centroid of the chosen face. This orthogonal line
through the twelve point center lies mid way between the Euler
point orthogonal line and the centroidal orthogonal line.
Furthermore, for any face, the twelve point center lies at the mid
point of the corresponding Euler point and the orthocenter for that
face.
The radius of the twelve point sphere is 1/3 of
the circumradius of the reference tetrahedron.
If OABC forms a generalized tetrahedron with a
vertex O as the origin and vectors \mathbf, \mathbf \, and \mathbf
\, represent the positions of the vertices A, B and C with respect
to O, then the radius of the insphere is given by:
and the radius of the circumsphere is given
by:
which gives the radius of the twelve point
sphere:
where:
- 6V= |\mathbf \cdot (\mathbf \times \mathbf)| \,
The vector position of various centers are given
as follows:
The centroid
The circumcenter
The Monge point
The Euler line relationships are:
- \mathbf = \mathbf + \frac (\mathbf-\mathbf)\,
- \mathbf = \mathbf + \frac (\mathbf-\mathbf)\,
It should also be noted that:
- \mathbf \cdot \mathbf = \frac \quad\quad \mathbf \cdot \mathbf
= \frac \quad\quad \mathbf \cdot \mathbf = \frac \,
and:
- \mathbf \cdot \mathbf = \frac \quad\quad \mathbf \cdot \mathbf
= \frac \quad\quad \mathbf \cdot \mathbf = \frac \,
Geometric relations
A tetrahedron is a 3-
simplex. Unlike in the case of
other Platonic solids, all vertices of a regular tetrahedron are
equidistant from each other (they are in the only possible
arrangement of four equidistant points).
A tetrahedron is a triangular
pyramid,
and the regular tetrahedron is
self-dual.
A regular tetrahedron can be embedded inside a
cube in
two ways such that each vertex is a vertex of the cube, and each
edge is a diagonal of one of the cube's faces. For one such
embedding, the
Cartesian
coordinates of the
vertices
are
- (+1, +1, +1);
- (−1, −1, +1);
- (−1, +1, −1);
- (+1, −1, −1).
For the other tetrahedron
(which is
dual to
the first), reverse all the signs. The volume of this tetrahedron
is 1/3 the volume of the cube. Combining both tetrahedra gives a
regular
polyhedral
compound called the
stella
octangula, whose interior is an
octahedron. Correspondingly,
a regular octahedron is the result of cutting off, from a regular
tetrahedron, four regular tetrahedra of half the linear size (i.e.,
rectifying
the tetrahedron). The above embedding divides the cube into five
tetrahedra, one of which is regular. In fact, 5 is the minimum
number of tetrahedra required to compose a cube.
Inscribing tetrahedra inside the regular
compound
of five cubes gives two more regular compounds, containing five
and ten tetrahedra.
Regular tetrahedra cannot
tessellate
space by themselves, although it seems likely enough that
Aristotle
reported it was possible. However, two regular tetrahedra can be
combined with an octahedron, giving a
rhombohedron which can tile
space.
However, there is at least one irregular
tetrahedron of which copies can tile space. If one relaxes the
requirement that the tetrahedra be all the same shape, one can tile
space using only tetrahedra in various ways. For example, one can
divide an octahedron into four identical tetrahedra and combine
them again with two regular ones. (As a side-note: these two kinds
of tetrahedron have the same volume.)
The tetrahedron is unique among the
uniform
polyhedra in possessing no parallel faces.
Related polyhedra
Intersecting tetrahedra
An interesting polyhedron can be constructed from
five intersecting tetrahedra. This
compound
of five tetrahedra has been known for hundreds of years. It comes
up regularly in the world of
origami. Joining the twenty
vertices would form a regular
dodecahedron. There are
both
left-handed and
right-handed
forms which are
mirror
images of each other.
The isometries of the regular tetrahedron
The vertices of a
cube can be grouped into two groups
of four, each forming a regular tetrahedron (see above, and also
animation, showing one of the two tetrahedra in the cube). The
symmetries of a regular tetrahedron correspond to half of those of
a cube: those which map the tetrahedrons to themselves, and not to
each other.
The tetrahedron is the only Platonic solid that
is not mapped to itself by point inversion.
The regular tetrahedron has 24 isometries,
forming the
symmetry
group Td, isomorphic to
S4. They
can be categorized as follows:
- T, isomorphic to alternating
group A4 (the identity and 11 proper rotations) with the
following conjugacy
classes (in parentheses are given the permutations of the
vertices, or correspondingly, the faces, and the
unit quaternion representation):
- identity (identity; 1)
- rotation about an axis through a vertex, perpendicular to the
opposite plane, by an angle of ±120°: 4 axes, 2 per axis, together
8 ((1 2 3), etc.; (1±i±j±k)/2)
- rotation by an angle of 180° such that an edge maps to the
opposite edge: 3 ((1 2)(3 4), etc.; i,j,k)
- reflections in a plane perpendicular to an edge: 6
- reflections in a plane combined with 90° rotation about an axis
perpendicular to the plane: 3 axes, 2 per axis, together 6;
equivalently, they are 90° rotations combined with inversion (x is
mapped to −x): the rotations correspond to those of the
cube about face-to-face axes
The isometries of irregular tetrahedra
The isometries of an
irregular tetrahedron depend on the geometry of the tetrahedron,
with 7 cases possible. In each case a
3-dimensional point group is formed.
- An equilateral triangle base and isosceles (and
non-equilateral) triangle sides gives 6 isometries, corresponding
to the 6 isometries of the base. As permutations of the vertices,
these 6 isometries are the identity 1, (123), (132), (12), (13) and
(23), forming the symmetry group C3v, isomorphic to S3.
- Four congruent isosceles (non-equilateral) triangles gives 8
isometries. If edges (1,2) and (3,4) are of different length to the
other 4 then the 8 isometries are the identity 1, reflections (12)
and (34), and 180° rotations (12)(34), (13)(24), (14)(23)
and improper 90° rotations (1234) and (1432) forming the
symmetry group D2d.
- Four congruent scalene triangles gives 4 isometries. The
isometries are 1 and the 180° rotations (12)(34), (13)(24),
(14)(23). This is the Klein
four-group V4 ≅ Z22, present as the point group D2.
- Two pairs of isomorphic isosceles (non-equilateral) triangles.
This gives two opposite edges (1,2) and (3,4) that are
perpendicular but different lengths, and then the 4 isometries are
1, reflections (12) and (34) and the 180° rotation
(12)(34). The symmetry group is C2v, isomorphic to V4.
- Two pairs of isomorphic scalene triangles. This has two pairs
of equal edges (1,3), (2,4) and (1,4), (2,3) but otherwise no edges
equal. The only two isometries are 1 and the rotation (12)(34),
giving the group C2 isomorphic to Z2.
- Two unequal isosceles triangles with a common base. This has
two pairs of equal edges (1,3), (1,4) and (2,3), (2,4) and
otherwise no edges equal. The only two isometries are 1 and the
reflection (34), giving the group Cs isomorphic to Z2.
- No edges equal, so that the only isometry is the identity, and
the symmetry group is the trivial group.
A law of sines for tetrahedra and the space of all shapes of
tetrahedra
A corollary of the usual
law of
sines is that in a
tetrahedron with vertices O,
A, B, C, we have
- \sin\angle OAB\cdot\sin\angle OBC\cdot\sin\angle OCA =
\sin\angle OAC\cdot\sin\angle OCB\cdot\sin\angle OBA.\,
One may view the two sides of this identity as
corresponding to clockwise and counterclockwise orientations of the
surface.
Putting any of the four vertices in the role of O
yields four such identities, but in a sense at most three of them
are independent: If the "clockwise" sides of three of them are
multiplied and the product is inferred to be equal to the product
of the "counterclockwise" sides of the same three identities, and
then common factors are cancelled from both sides, the result is
the fourth identity. One reason to be interested in this
"independence" relation is this: It is widely known that three
angles are the angles of some triangle if and only if their sum is
a half-circle. What condition on 12 angles is necessary and
sufficient for them to be the 12 angles of some tetrahedron?
Clearly the sum of the angles of any side of the tetrahedron must
be a half-circle. Since there are four such triangles, there are
four such constraints on sums of angles, and the number of
degrees
of freedom is thereby reduced from 12 to 8. The four relations
given by this sine law further reduce the number of degrees of
freedom, not from 8 down to 4, but only from 8 down to 5, since the
fourth constraint is not independent of the first three. Thus the
space of all shapes of tetrahedra is 5-dimensional.
Computational uses
Complex shapes are often broken down into a
mesh of irregular
tetrahedra in preparation for
finite
element analysis and
computational fluid dynamics studies.
Applications and uses
Chemistry
Electronics
- If each edge of a tetrahedron were to be replaced by a one
ohm
resistor, the
resistance between any two vertices would be 1/2 ohm.
References
tetrahedral in Bulgarian: Тетраедър
tetrahedral in Catalan: Tetràedre
tetrahedral in Czech: Čtyřstěn
tetrahedral in Danish: Tetraeder
tetrahedral in German: Tetraeder
tetrahedral in Esperanto: Kvaredro
tetrahedral in Spanish: Tetraedro
tetrahedral in Basque: Tetraedro
tetrahedral in Persian: چهاروجهی
tetrahedral in French: Tétraèdre
tetrahedral in Hebrew: ארבעון
tetrahedral in Croatian: Tetraedar
tetrahedral in Italian: Tetraedro
tetrahedral in Japanese: 三角錐
tetrahedral in Korean: 사면체
tetrahedral in Lithuanian: Tetraedras
tetrahedral in Malay (macrolanguage):
Tetrahedron
tetrahedral in Dutch: Viervlak
tetrahedral in Norwegian: Tetraeder
tetrahedral in Polish: Czworościan
tetrahedral in Portuguese: Tetraedro
tetrahedral in Russian: Правильный
тетраэдр
tetrahedral in Simple English: Tetrahedron
tetrahedral in Slovenian: Tetraeder
tetrahedral in Serbian: Тетраедар
tetrahedral in Finnish: Tetraedri
tetrahedral in Swedish: Tetraeder
tetrahedral in Tamil: நான்முக முக்கோணகம்
tetrahedral in Thai: ทรงสี่หน้า
tetrahedral in Ukrainian: Тетраедр
tetrahedral in Contenese: 四面體
tetrahedral in Chinese: 四面體