Message #1978
From: Roice Nelson <roice3@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: hemi-puzzles!
Date: Sat, 24 Dec 2011 00:47:39 -0600
Here’s a little more on the {3,5} 8-Color.  These puzzles with asymmetrical
colorings are strange, but they arise naturally from the math that
identifies cells with each other, so I wanted to understand things a little
better.
To do that, I made a graph of the 4 vertices, 10 edges, and 8 faces all
"rolled up".  By that I mean each of these features is only shown once,
rather than shown multiple times (with hand waving that "this face is
identified with that one", as the MagicTile presentation requires).  An
image of my graph with default MagicTile colors is
here<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/4D_Cubing/photos/album/1694853720/pic/1602345595/view>,
and some observations about it are:
- The cyan and purple cells are
 henagons<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henagon> (polygons
 with one vertex and one edge). The face twisting of these two scrambles
 nothing.
- The blue and orange cells are degenerate triangles.  They have three
 sides, but only two vertices. I initially thought they were
 digons<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digon>,
 but they are more like a digon with a henagon subtracted out. I don’t know
 if there is a special name for this polygon.
- The red, yellow, white, and green cells are proper triangles.  (By the
 way, if you want to trace out the green and white triangles in the graph,
 note that the edge that goes off the top of the screen is the same edge
 that comes up from the bottom.)
- Since there are different cell types, this puzzle represents a *
 non-regular* spherical polyhedron. It was cool to realize this could be
 done with MagicTile’s abstraction :)
- Two of the vertices have 4 colors surrounding them, and two have 5
 colors surrounding them. Even so, the repeated color on a 4C vertex piece
 comes from different parts of a triangle, so the behavior is still 5C-like.
- Since I was able to make this planar
 graph<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planar_graph>representation of the
 object, it was easier to see how it has the topology
 of the sphere.
I haven’t tried to make sequences to solve it yet, but will.  If anyone
solves this puzzle, I’d love to hear about your experience with it!
Roice
On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 12:59 PM, Roice Nelson <roice3@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I added some hemi-puzzles, all ones we haven’t seen before.  The
> hemi-dodecahedron and hemi-cube are not new, but I made them vertex turning
> this time.  There are also hemi-octahedron and hemi-icosahedron puzzles
> now.  All of these have the topology of the projective plane.
>
> I also stumbled upon a {3,5} 8-Color puzzle.  The coloring is not
> symmetrical (like the {8,3} 10-Color and some of the other hyperbolic
> puzzles).  It turns out to have 8 faces, 10 edges, and 4 vertices, so the Euler
> Characteristic <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_characteristic> shows
> it has the topology of a sphere.  I’ll try to write a little more about
> this 8C puzzle soon.
>
> You can download the latest by clicking here<http://www.gravitation3d.com/magictile/downloads/MagicTile_v2_Preview.zip>
> .
>
> Happy Holidays,
> Roice
>