930.00
Tetrahelix: Unzipping Angle
|
930.10
Continuous Pattern Strip: "Come and Go"
|
![]() Fig. 930.11 |
930.11
Exploring the multiramifications of spontaneously
regenerative reangulations
and triangulations, we introduce upon a continuous ribbon
a 60-degree-patterned,
progressively alternating, angular bounce-off inwards
from first one side and then the
other side of the ribbon, which produces a wave pattern
whose length is the interval along
any one side between successive bounce-offs which, being
at 60 degrees in this case,
produces a series of equiangular triangles along the
strip. As seen from one side, the
equiangular triangles are alternately oriented as peak
away, then base away, then peak
away again, etc. This is the patterning of the only
equilibrious, never realized, angular field
state, in contradistinction to its sine-curve wave,
periodic realizations of progressively
accumulative, disequilibrious aberrations, whose peaks
and valleys may also be patterned
between the same length wave intervals along the sides
of the ribbon as that of the
equilibrious periodicity. (See Illus. 930.11.)
|
|
930.21
The two uncovered triangles of the octahedron may
be covered by wrapping
only one more triangularly folded ribbon whose axis
of wraparound is one of the XYZ
symmetrical axes of the octahedron.
|
|
930.25
All of the vertexes of the intercrossings of the three-,
six-, nine-ribbons'
internal parallel lines and edges identify the centers
of spheres closest-packed into
tetrahedra, octahedra, and icosahedra of a frequency
corresponding to the number of
parallel intervals of the ribbons. These numbers (as
we know from Sec.
223.21) are:
|
|
930.26
Thus we learn sum-totally how a ribbon (band) wave,
a waveband, can self-
interfere periodically to produce in-shuntingly all
the three prime structures of Universe
and a complex isotropic vector matrix of successively
shuttle-woven tetrahedra and
octahedra. It also illustrates how energy may be wave-shuntingly
self-knotted or self-
interfered with (see Sec.
506), and their energies impounded
in local, high-frequency
systems which we misidentify as only-seemingly-static
matter.
|
|
931.00
Chemical Bonds
|
|
931.10
Omnicongruence: When two or more systems are joined
vertex to vertex,
edge to edge, or in omnicongruence-in single, double,
triple, or quadruple bonding, then
the topological accounting must take cognizance of the
congruent vectorial build in
growth. (See Illus.
931.10.)
|
|
931.51
The behavioral hierarchy of bondings is integrated
four-dimensionally with
the synergies of mass-interattractions and precession.
|
|
932.00
Viral Steerability
|
|
932.01
The four chemical compounds guanine, cytosine, thymine,
and adenine,
whose first letters are GCTA, and of which DNA always
consists in various paired code
pattern sequences, such as GC, GC, CG, AT, TA, GC, in
which A and T are always paired
as are G and C. The pattern controls effected by DNA
in all biological structures can be
demonstrated by equivalent variations of the four individually
unique spherical radii of two
unique pairs of spheres which may be centered in any
variation of series that will result in
the viral steerability of the shaping of the DNA tetrahelix
prototypes. (See Sec.
1050.00 et. seq.)
|
|
933.00
Tetrahelix
|
![]() Fig. 933.01 |
933.01
The tetrahelix is a helical array of triple-bonded
tetrahedra. (See Illus. 933.01)
We have a column of tetrahedra with straight edges,
but when face-bonded to
one another, and the tetrahedra's edges are interconnected,
they altogether form a
hyperbolic-parabolic, helical column. The column spirals
around to make the helix, and it
takes just ten tetrahedra to complete one cycle of the
helix.
|
|
933.02
This tetrahelix column can be equiangle-triangular,
triple-ribbon-wave
produced as in the methodology of Secs.
930.10
and
930.20
by taking a ribbon three-
panels wide instead of one-panel wide as in Sec.
930.10.
With this triple panel folded
along both of its interior lines running parallel to
the three-band-wide ribbon's outer
edges, and with each of the three bands interiorly scribed
and folded on the lines of the
equiangle-triangular wave pattern, it will be found
that what might at first seem to promise
to be a straight, prismatic, three-edged, triangular-based
column__upon matching the
next-nearest above, wave interval, outer edges of the
three panels together (and taping
them together)__will form the same tetrahelix column
as that which is produced by taking
separate equiedged tetrahedra and face-bonding them
together. There is no distinguishable
difference, as shown in the illustration.
|
|
933.04
Such tetrahelical columns may be made with regular
or irregular tetrahedral
components because the sum of the angles of a tetrahedron's
face will always be 720
degrees, whether regular or asymmetric. If we employed
asymmetric tetrahedra they
would have six different edge lengths, as would be the
case if we had four different
diametric balls__G, C, T, A__and we paired them tangentially,
G with C, and T with A,
and we then nested them together (as in Sec.
623.12),
and by continuing the columns in
any different combinations of these pairs we would be
able to modulate the rate of angular
changes to design approximately any form.
|
|
933.08
Closest Packing of Different-sized Balls: It could
be that the CCTA
tetrahelix derives from the closest packing of different-sized
balls. The Mites and Sytes
(see Sec.
953) could be the
tetrahedra of the GCTA because
they are both positive-
negative and allspace filling.
|
| Next Section: 934.00 |