As point group
The icosahedral rotation group I with fundamental domain
Apart from the two infinite series of prismatic and antiprismatic symmetry, rotational icosahedral symmetry or chiral icosahedral symmetry of chiral objects and full icosahedral symmetry or achiral icosahedral symmetry are the discrete point symmetries (or equivalently, symmetries on the sphere) with the largest symmetry groups. Icosahedral symmetry is not compatible with translational symmetry, so there are no associated crystallographic point groups or space groups.
Presentations corresponding to the above are: I: Ih: Note that other presentations are possible, for instance as an alternating group (for I). Group structureThe icosahedral rotation group I is of order 60. The group I is isomorphic to A5, the alternating group of even permutations of five objects. This isomorphism can be realized by I acting on various compounds, notably the compound of five cubes (which inscribe in the dodecahedron), the compound of five octahedra, or either of the two compounds of five tetrahedra (which are enantiomorphs, and inscribe in the dodecahedron). The group contains 5 versions of Th with 20 versions of D3 (10 axes, 2 per axis), and 6 versions of D5. The full icosahedral group Ih has order 120. It has I as normal subgroup of index 2. The group Ih is isomorphic to I × C2, or A5 × C2, with the inversion in the center corresponding to element (identity,-1), where C2 is written multiplicatively. Ih acts on the compound of five cubes and the compound of five octahedra, but -1 acts as the identity (as cubes and octahedra are centrally symmetric). It acts on the compound of ten tetrahedra: I acts on the two chiral halves (compounds of five tetrahedra), and -1 interchanges the two halves. Notably, it does not act as S5, and these groups are not isomorphic; see below for details. The group contains 10 versions of D3d and 6 versions of D5d (symmetries like antiprisms). I is also isomorphic to PSL2(5), and Ih is isomorphic to SL2(5) (they are both central extensions by C2). Commonly confused groupsThe following groups all have order 120, but are not isomorphic:
They correspond to the following short exact sequences (which do not split) and product In words,
Conjugacy classesThe conjugacy classes of I are:
Those of Ih include also each with inversion:
SubgroupsAll of these classes of subgroups are conjugate (i.e., all vertex stabilizers are conjugate), and admit geometric interpretations. Note that the stabilizer of a vertex/edge/face/polyhedron and its opposite are equal, since − 1 is central. Vertex stabilizersStabilizers of an opposite pair of vertices can be interpreted as stabilizers of the axis they generate.
Edge stabilizersStabilizers of an opposite pair of edges can be interpreted as stabilizers of the rectangle they generate.
Face stabilizersStabilizers of an opposite pair of faces can be interpreted as stabilizers of the anti-prism they generate.
Polyhedron stabilizersFor each of these, there are 5 conjugate copies, and the conjugation action gives a map, indeed an isomorphism,
Fundamental DomainFundamental domains for the icosahedral rotation group and the full icosahedral group are given by:
Fundamental domain in the disdyakis triacontahedron
In the disdyakis triacontahedron one full face is a fundamental domain; other solids with the same symmetry can be obtained by adjusting the orientation of the faces, e.g. flattening selected subsets of faces to combine each subset into one face, or replacing each face by multiple faces, or a curved surface.
Solids with icosahedral symmetry
Full icosahedral symmetryPlatonic solids - regular polyhedra (all faces of the same type) Archimedean solids - polyhedra with more than one polygon face type.
Catalan solids - duals of the Archimedean solids.
See also
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