In Euclidean geometry, rectification is the process of truncating a polytope by marking the midpoints of all its edges, and cutting off its vertices at those points. The resulting polytope will be bounded by the vertex figures and the rectified facets of the original polytope.
If the starting polytope is regular, the facets of the resulting polytope will also be regular. However, the resulting polytope itself will generally not be regular.
The dual of a polygon is the same as its rectified form.
Each platonic solid and its dual have the same rectified polyhedron. (This is not true of polytopes in higher dimensions.)
Examples
| Parent | Rectification | Dual |
|---|
The rectified polyhedron turns out to be expressible as the intersection of the original platonic solid with an appropriated scaled concentric version of its dual. For this reason, its name is a combination of the names of the original and the dual:
Each convex regular polychoron has a rectified form as a uniform polychoron.
A regular polychoron {p,q,r} has cells {p,q}. Its rectification will have two cell types, a rectified {p,q} polyhedron left from the original cells and {q,r} polyhedron as new cells formed by each truncated vertex.
A rectified {p,q,r} is not the same as a rectified {r,q,p}, however. A further truncation, called bitruncation, is symmetric between a polychoron and its dual. See Uniform_polychoron#Geometric_derivations.
Examples
| Parent | Rectification |
|---|
| (No image) Rectified tesseract |
| (No image) rectified 24-cell |
| (No image) rectified 120-cell |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Rectification (geometry)".
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