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453.00
Vector Equilibrium: Basic Equilibrium LCD Triangle
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![]() Fig. 453.01 |
453.01
The system of 25 great circles of the vector equilibrium
defines its own
lowest common multiple spherical triangle, whose surface
is exactly 1/48th of the entire
sphere's surface. Within each of these l/4sth-sphere
triangles and their boundary arcs are
contained and repeated each time all of the unique interpatterning
relationships of the 25
great circles. Twenty-four of the 48 triangles' patternings
are "positive" and 24 are
"negative," i.e., mirrorimages of one another, which
condition is more accurately defined
as "inside out" of one another. This inside-outing of
the big triangles and each of their
contained triangles is experimentally demonstrable by
opening any triangle at any one of
its vertexes and holding one of its edges while sweeping
the other two in a 360-degree
circling around the fixed edge to rejoin the triangle
with its previous outsideness now
inside of it. This is the basic equilibrium LCD triangle;
for a discussion of the basic
disequilibrium LCD triangle, see
Sec. 905.
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![]() Fig. 453.02 |
453.02
Inside-Outing of Triangle: The inside-outing transformation
of a triangle is
usually misidentified as "left vs. right," or "positive
and negative," or as "existence vs.
annihilation" in physics.
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453.03
The inside-outing is four-dimensional and often complex.
It functions as
complex intro-extroverting.
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454.00
Vector Equilibrium: Spherical Polyhedra Described
by Great Circles
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![]() Fig. 454.01A ![]() Fig. 454.01B ![]() Fig. 454.01C |
454.01
The 25 great circles of the spherical vector equilibrium
provide all the
spherical edges for five spherical polyhedra: the tetrahedron,
octahedron, cube, rhombic
dodecahedron, and vector equilibrium, whose corresponding
planar-faceted polyhedra are
all volumetrically rational, even multiples of the tetrahedron.
For instance, if the
tetrahedron's volume is taken as unity, the octahedron's
volume is four, the cube's volume
is three, the rhombic dodecahedron's is six, and the
vector cquilibrium's is 20 (see
drawings section).
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454.03
The spherical tetrahedron is composed of four spherical
triangles, each
consisting of 12 basic, least-common-denominator spherical
triangles of vector
equilibrium.
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![]() Fig. 454.06 |
454.06
The spherical rhombic dodecahedron is composed of
12 spherical diamond-
rhombic faces, each composed of four basic-vector-equilibrium,
least-common-
denominator triangles of the 25 great-circle, spherical-grid
triangles.
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455.00
Great-Circle Foldabilities of Vector Equilibrium
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![]() Fig. 455.11 |
455.11
In the vector equilibrium's six great-circle bow ties,
all the internal, i.e.,
central angles of 70° 32' and 54° 44', are those of the
surface angles of the vector
equilibrium's four great-circle bow ties, and vice versa.
This phenomenon of turning the
inside central angles outwardly and the outside surface
angles inwardly, with various
fractionations and additions, characterizes the progressive
transformations of the vector
equilibrium from one greatcircle foldable group into
another, into its successive stages of
the spherical cube and octahedron with all of their
central and surface angles being both 90
degrees even.
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![]() Fig. 455.20 |
455.20
Foldability of 12 Great Circles into Vector Equilibrium:
We can take a
disc of paper, which is inherently of 360 degrees, and
having calculated with spherical
trigonometry all the surface and central angles of both
the associated and separate groups
of 3__ 4__ 6__ 12
great circles of the vector equilibrium's
25 great circles, we can lay out
the spherical arcs which always subtend the central
angles. The 25 great circles interfere
with and in effect "bounce off" or penetrate one another
in an omnitriangulated,
nonredundant spherical triangle grid. Knowing the central
angles, we can lay them out and
describe foldable triangles in such a way that they
make a plurality of tetrahedra that
permit and accommodate fastening together edge-to-edge
with no edge duplication or
overlap. When each set, 312, of the vector equilibrium
is completed, its components may
be associated with one another to produce complete spheres
with their respective great-
circle, 360-degree integrity reestablished by their
arc increment association.
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| Next Section: 456.00 |