Enneacontagon

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Regular enneacontagon
Regular polygon 90.svg
A regular enneacontagon
Type Regular polygon
Edges and vertices 90
Schläfli symbol {90}, t{45}
Coxeter diagram CDel node 1.pngCDel 9.pngCDel 0x.pngCDel node.png
CDel node 1.pngCDel 4.pngCDel 5.pngCDel node 1.png
Symmetry group Dihedral (D90), order 2×90
Internal angle (degrees) 176°
Dual polygon self
Properties convex, cyclic, equilateral, isogonal, isotoxal

In geometry, an enneacontagon or enenecontagon (from Ancient Greek ἑννενήκοντα, ninety[1]) is a ninety-sided polygon or 90-gon.[2][3] The sum of any enneacontagon's interior angles is 15840 degrees.

A regular enneacontagon is represented by Schläfli symbol {90} and can be constructed as a truncated tetracontapentagon, t{45}, which alternates two types of edges.

Regular enneacontagon properties

One interior angle in a regular enneacontagon is 176°, meaning that one exterior angle would be 4°.

The area of a regular enneacontagon is (with t = edge length)

A = \frac{45}{2}t^2 \cot \frac{\pi}{90}

and its inradius is

r = \frac{1}{2}t \cot \frac{\pi}{90}

The circumradius of a regular enneacontagon is

R = \frac{1}{2}t \csc \frac{\pi}{90}

Since 90 = 2 × 32 × 5, a regular enneacontagon is not constructible using a compass and straightedge,[4] but is constructible if the use of an angle trisector is allowed.[5]

Symmetry

The symmetries of a regular enneacontagon, divided into 6 subgraphs containing index 2 subgroups. Each symmetry within a subgraph is related to the lower connected subgraphs by index 3 or 5.

The regular enneacontagon has Dih90 dihedral symmetry, order 180, represented by 90 lines of reflection. Dih90 has 11 dihedral subgroups: Dih45, (Dih30, Dih15), (Dih18, Dih9), (Dih10, Dih5), (Dih6, Dih3), and (Dih2, Dih1). And 12 more cyclic symmetries: (Z90, Z45), (Z30, Z15), (Z18, Z9), (Z10, Z5), (Z6, Z3), and (Z2, Z1), with Zn representing π/n radian rotational symmetry.

These 24 symmmetries are related to 30 distinct symmetries on the enneacontagon. John Conway labels these lower symmetries with a letter and order of the symmetry follows the letter.[6] He gives d (diagonal) with mirror lines through vertices, p with mirror lines through edges (perpendicular), i with mirror lines through both vertices and edges, and g for rotational symmetry. a1 labels no symmetry.

These lower symmetries allows degrees of freedom in defining irregular enneacontagons. Only the g90 symmetry has no degrees of freedom but can seen as directed edges.

Enneacontagram

An enneacontagram is a 90-sided star polygon. There are 11 regular forms given by Schläfli symbols {90/7}, {90/11}, {90/13}, {90/17}, {90/19}, {90/23}, {90/29}, {90/31}, {90/37}, {90/41}, and {90/43}, as well as 33 regular star figures with the same vertex configuration.

Regular star polygons {90/k}
Pictures Star polygon 90-7.svg
{90/7}
Star polygon 90-11.svg
{90/11}
Star polygon 90-13.svg
{90/13}
Star polygon 90-17.svg
{90/17}
Star polygon 90-19.svg
{90/19}
Star polygon 90-23.svg
{90/23}
Interior angle 152° 136° 128° 112° 104° 88°
Pictures Star polygon 90-29.svg
{90/29}
Star polygon 90-31.svg
{90/31}
Star polygon 90-37.svg
{90/37}
Star polygon 90-41.svg
{90/41}
Star polygon 90-43.svg
{90/43}
 
Interior angle 64° 56° 32° 16°  

References

  1. Greek Numbers and Numerals (Ancient and Modern) by Harry Foundalis
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found..
  3. The New Elements of Mathematics: Algebra and Geometry by Charles Sanders Peirce (1976), p.298
  4. Constructible Polygon
  5. http://www.math.iastate.edu/thesisarchive/MSM/EekhoffMSMSS07.pdf
  6. John H. Conway, Heidi Burgiel, Chaim Goodman-Strauss, (2008) The Symmetries of Things, ISBN 978-1-56881-220-5 (Chapter 20, Generalized Schaefli symbols, Types of symmetry of a polygon pp. 275-278)