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714.00
Interstabilization of Local Stiffeners
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715.00
Locked Kiss
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716.00
Complex Continuity and Discontinuity in Tensegrity
Structures
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![]() Fig. 716.01 |
716.01
The terminal junctures of four three-strut tensegrity
octahedra are all 180-
degree junctures. They appear to be compressionally
continuous, while the central
coherence of the three struts appears visibly discontinuous.
The complex tensegrity
presents a visibly deceptive appearance to the unwary
observer. The two joined legs of the
basic units appear as single units; as such, they appear
to be primary elements of the
complex tensegrity, whereas we learn from construction
that our elements are the three-
strut octahedra and that the cohering principle of the
simplest elements is tensegrity.
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|
716.02
The fundamental, repeatable unit used to form the
spherical tensegrity
structures is a flattened form of the basic three-strut
tensegrity octahedron.
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|
716.03
The basic 12-frequency tensegrity matrix employs collections
of the basic
three-strut units joined at dead center between single-
and double-bonded discontinuity.
The shaded triangles in the illustration represent the
sites for each of the three-strut units.
This matrix is applied to the spherical triacontrahedron__consequently,
the large 12-
frequency rhombus (illustration
716.01C) is one-thirtieth
of the entire sphere.
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|
716.10
Convergence
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717.00
Single- and Double-Bonding in Tensegrity Spheres
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![]() Fig. 717.01 |
717.01
Basic three-strut tensegrities may be joined in single-bonding
or double-
bonding to form a complex, 270-strut, isotropic tensegrity
geodesic sphere. It can be
composited to rotate negatively or positively. A six-frequency
triacontrahedron tensegrity
is shown in illustration
717.01.
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717.02
Complexes of basic three-strut tensegrities are shown
with axial alignment of
exterior terminals to be joined in single bond as a
90-strut tensegrity.
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720.00
Basic Tensegrity Structures
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721.00
Stability Requires Six Struts
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|
721.01
Stability requires six struts, each of which is a
combinedly push-pull
structural member. It is a synergetic (Sec.
101) characteristic
of minimum structural (Sec.
610) systems (Sec.
402) that the system is not stable
until the introduction of the last
structural component (Sec.
621.10) essential to completion
of minimum omnisymmetric
array.
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|
721.02
Redundancy (Sec.
723) can be neither predicted nor
predetermined by
observation of either the integral constraints or external
freedoms of energetic behaviors
of single struts, or beams, or columns, or any one chain
link of a series that is less than 12
in number, i.e., six positive vectors and six negative
tensors. Of these 12, six are open-
endedly uncoordinate, disintegrative forces that are
always omni-cohered by six integrative
forces in finitely closed coordination.
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722.00
Push-Pull Members
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723.00
Redundance
|
|
723.01
There are metaphysical redundancies, repeating the
same thing, saying it in a
little different way each time.
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723.04
There are two classes of redundant acts:
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724.00
Three and Only Basic Structures
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724.01
The original six vector-edge members of the tensegrity
tetrahedron may be
transformed through the tensegrity-octahedron phase
and finally into the tensegrity-
icosahedron phase. The same six members transform their
relation to each other through
the full range of the three (only) fundamental structures
of nature: the tetrahedron, the
octahedron, and the icosahedron. (See Secs.
532.40,
610.20,
724,
1010.20,
1011.30
and
1031.13.)
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724.02
The same six members transform from containing one
volume to containing
18.51 volumes. These are the principles actively operative
in atomic-nucleus behavior in
visual intertransformations.
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![]() Fig. 724.10 |
724.10
Tensegrity Octahedron: The simplest form of tensegrity
is the octahedron
with three compression members crossing each other.
The three compression struts do not
touch each other as they pass at the center. They are
held together only at their terminals
by the comprehensive triangular tension net. The same
three-islanded struts of the
tensegrity octahedron may be mildly reorganized or asymmetrically
transformed.
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724.20
Tensegrity Icosahedron: The six-islanded-strut icosahedron
and its
allspace-filling, closest-packing capability provide
omni-equi-optimum economy tensegrity
Universe structuring.
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![]() Fig. 724.30 |
724.30
Six-Strut Tensegrities: Two three-strut tensegrities
may be joined together
to make the tensegrity icosahedron. This form has six
members in three parallel sets with
their ends held together in tension. There are 12 terminals
of the six struts (the two
octahedra__each with three struts of six ends__combined).
When you connect up these 12
terminals, you reveal the 12 vertexes of the icosahedron.
There are 20 triangles of the
icosahedron clearly described by the tension members
connecting the 12 points in the most
economical omnitriangular pattern.
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724.31
In the tensegrity icosahedron, there are six tension
members, which join
parallel struts to each other. If these tension members
are removed from the icosahedron,
only eight triangles remain from the original 20. These
eight triangles are the eight
transforming triangles of the symmetrical contraction
of the vector equilibrium "jitterbug."
(See Sec.
460.)
Consequently, this "incomplete" icosahedron
demonstrates an expansion-
contraction behavior similar to the "jitterbug," although
pulsing symmetrically inward-
outward within more restricted limits.
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| Next Section: 725.00 |