Cube

In geometry, a cube is a three-dimensional solid object bounded by six square faces, facets, or sides, with three meeting at each vertex.

Regular hexahedron
Cube
(Click here for rotating model)
Type Platonic solid
Elements F = 6, E = 12
V = 8 (χ = 2)
Faces by sides 6{4}
Conway notation C
Schläfli symbols {4,3}
t{2,4} or {4}×{}
tr{2,2}
{}×{}×{} = {}3
Face configuration V3.3.3.3
Wythoff symbol 3 | 2 4
Coxeter diagram CubeCubeCubeCubeCube
Symmetry Oh, B3, [4,3], (*432)
Rotation group O, [4,3]+, (432)
References U06, C18, W3
Properties regular, convexzonohedron, Hanner polytope
Dihedral angle 90°
Cube
4.4.4
(Vertex figure)
Cube
Octahedron
(dual polyhedron)
Cube
Net

Viewed from a corner, it is a hexagon and its net is usually depicted as a cross.

Cube
3D model of a cube

The cube is the only regular hexahedron and is one of the five Platonic solids. It has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices.

The cube is also a square parallelepiped, an equilateral cuboid, a right rhombohedron, and a 3-zonohedron. It is a regular square prism in three orientations, and a trigonal trapezohedron in four orientations.

The cube is dual to the octahedron. It has cubical or octahedral symmetry, and is the only convex polyhedron whose faces are all squares. Its generalization for higher-dimensional spaces is called a hypercube.

Orthogonal projections

The cube has four special orthogonal projections, centered, on a vertex, edges, face and normal to its vertex figure. The first and third correspond to the A2 and B2 Coxeter planes.

Orthogonal projections
Centered by Face Vertex
Coxeter planes B2
Cube 
A2
Cube 
Projective
symmetry
[4] [6]
Tilted views Cube  Cube 

Spherical tiling

The cube can also be represented as a spherical tiling, and projected onto the plane via a stereographic projection. This projection is conformal, preserving angles but not areas or lengths. Straight lines on the sphere are projected as circular arcs on the plane.

Cube  Cube 
Orthographic projection Stereographic projection

Cartesian coordinates

For a cube centered at the origin, with edges parallel to the axes and with an edge length of 2, the Cartesian coordinates of the vertices are

    (±1, ±1, ±1)

while the interior consists of all points (x0, x1, x2) with −1 < xi < 1 for all i.

As a configuration

This configuration matrix represents the cube. The rows and columns correspond to vertices, edges, and faces. The diagonal numbers say how many of each element occur in the whole cube. The nondiagonal numbers say how many of the column's element occur in or at the row's element. For example, the 2 in the first column of the middle row indicates that there are 2 vertices in (i.e., at the extremes of) each edge; the 3 in the middle column of the first row indicates that 3 edges meet at each vertex.

Cube 

Equation in three dimensional space

In analytic geometry, a cube's surface with center (x0, y0, z0) and edge length of 2a is the locus of all points (x, y, z) such that

    Cube 

A cube can also be considered the limiting case of a 3D superellipsoid as all three exponents approach infinity.

Formulas

For a cube of edge length Cube :

surface area Cube  volume Cube 
face diagonal Cube  space diagonal Cube 
radius of circumscribed sphere Cube  radius of sphere tangent to edges Cube 
radius of inscribed sphere Cube  angles between faces (in radians) Cube 

As the volume of a cube is the third power of its sides Cube , third powers are called cubes, by analogy with squares and second powers.

A cube has the largest volume among cuboids (rectangular boxes) with a given surface area. Also, a cube has the largest volume among cuboids with the same total linear size (length+width+height).

Point in space

For a cube whose circumscribing sphere has radius R, and for a given point in its 3-dimensional space with distances di from the cube's eight vertices, we have:

    Cube 

Doubling the cube

Doubling the cube, or the Delian problem, was the problem posed by ancient Greek mathematicians of using only a compass and straightedge to start with the length of the edge of a given cube and to construct the length of the edge of a cube with twice the volume of the original cube. They were unable to solve this problem, which in 1837 Pierre Wantzel proved it to be impossible because the cube root of 2 is not a constructible number.

Uniform colorings and symmetry

Cube 
Octahedral symmetry tree

The cube has three uniform colorings, named by the unique colors of the square faces around each vertex: 111, 112, 123.

The cube has four classes of symmetry, which can be represented by vertex-transitive coloring the faces. The highest octahedral symmetry Oh has all the faces the same color. The dihedral symmetry D4h comes from the cube being a solid, with all the six sides being different colors. The prismatic subsets D2d has the same coloring as the previous one and D2h has alternating colors for its sides for a total of three colors, paired by opposite sides. Each symmetry form has a different Wythoff symbol.

Name Regular
hexahedron
Square prism Rectangular
trapezoprism
Rectangular
cuboid
Rhombic
prism
Trigonal
trapezohedron
Coxeter
diagram
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Schläfli
symbol
{4,3} {4}×{ }
rr{4,2}
s2{2,4} { }3
tr{2,2}
{ }×2{ }
Wythoff
symbol
3 | 4 2 4 2 | 2 2 2 2 |
Symmetry Oh
[4,3]
(*432)
D4h
[4,2]
(*422)
D2d
[4,2+]
(2*2)
D2h
[2,2]
(*222)
D3d
[6,2+]
(2*3)
Symmetry
order
24 16 8 8 12
Image
(uniform
coloring)
Cube 
(111)
Cube 
(112)
Cube 
(112)
Cube 
(123)
Cube 
(112)
Cube 
(111), (112)

Geometric relations

Cube 
The 11 nets of the cube
Cube 
Net of a cube folding into 3 dimensions

A cube has eleven nets: that is, there are eleven ways to flatten a hollow cube by cutting seven edges. To color the cube so that no two adjacent faces have the same color, one would need at least three colors.

The cube is the cell of the only regular tiling of three-dimensional Euclidean space. It is also unique among the Platonic solids in having faces with an even number of sides and, consequently, it is the only member of that group that is a zonohedron (every face has point symmetry).

The cube can be cut into six identical square pyramids. If these square pyramids are then attached to the faces of a second cube, a rhombic dodecahedron is obtained (with pairs of coplanar triangles combined into rhombic faces).

In theology

Cubes appear in Abrahamic religions. The Kaaba (Arabic for 'cube') in Mecca is one example. Cubes also appear in Judaism as tefillin, and the New Jerusalem is described in the New Testament as a cube.

Other dimensions

The analogue of a cube in four-dimensional Euclidean space has a special name—a tesseract or hypercube. More properly, a hypercube (or n-dimensional cube or simply n-cube) is the analogue of the cube in n-dimensional Euclidean space and a tesseract is the order-4 hypercube. A hypercube is also called a measure polytope.

There are analogues of the cube in lower dimensions too: a point in dimension 0, a line segment in one dimension and a square in two dimensions.

Cube 
The dual of a cube is an octahedron, seen here with vertices at the center of the cube's square faces.
Cube 
The hemicube is the 2-to-1 quotient of the cube.

The quotient of the cube by the antipodal map yields a projective polyhedron, the hemicube.

If the original cube has edge length 1, its dual polyhedron (an octahedron) has edge length Cube .

The cube is a special case in various classes of general polyhedra:

Name Equal edge-lengths? Equal angles? Right angles?
Cube Yes Yes Yes
Rhombohedron Yes Yes No
Cuboid No Yes Yes
Parallelepiped No Yes No
quadrilaterally faced hexahedron No No No

The vertices of a cube can be grouped into two groups of four, each forming a regular tetrahedron; more generally this is referred to as a demicube. These two together form a regular compound, the stella octangula. The intersection of the two forms a regular octahedron. The symmetries of a regular tetrahedron correspond to those of a cube which map each tetrahedron to itself; the other symmetries of the cube map the two to each other.

One such regular tetrahedron has a volume of 1/3 of that of the cube. The remaining space consists of four equal irregular tetrahedra with a volume of 1/6 of that of the cube, each.

The rectified cube is the cuboctahedron. If smaller corners are cut off we get a polyhedron with six octagonal faces and eight triangular ones. In particular we can get regular octagons (truncated cube). The rhombicuboctahedron is obtained by cutting off both corners and edges to the correct amount.

A cube can be inscribed in a dodecahedron so that each vertex of the cube is a vertex of the dodecahedron and each edge is a diagonal of one of the dodecahedron's faces; taking all such cubes gives rise to the regular compound of five cubes.

If two opposite corners of a cube are truncated at the depth of the three vertices directly connected to them, an irregular octahedron is obtained. Eight of these irregular octahedra can be attached to the triangular faces of a regular octahedron to obtain the cuboctahedron.

The cube is topologically related to a series of spherical polyhedral and tilings with order-3 vertex figures.

*n32 symmetry mutation of regular tilings: {n,3}
Spherical Euclidean Compact hyperb. Paraco. Noncompact hyperbolic
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 
{2,3} {3,3} {4,3} {5,3} {6,3} {7,3} {8,3} {∞,3} {12i,3} {9i,3} {6i,3} {3i,3}

The cuboctahedron is one of a family of uniform polyhedra related to the cube and regular octahedron.

Uniform octahedral polyhedra
Symmetry: [4,3], (*432) [4,3]+
(432)
[1+,4,3] = [3,3]
(*332)
[3+,4]
(3*2)
{4,3} t{4,3} r{4,3}
r{31,1}
t{3,4}
t{31,1}
{3,4}
{31,1}
rr{4,3}
s2{3,4}
tr{4,3} sr{4,3} h{4,3}
{3,3}
h2{4,3}
t{3,3}
s{3,4}
s{31,1}
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
= Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
= Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
= Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  =
Cube Cube Cube  or Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  =
Cube Cube Cube  or Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  =
Cube Cube Cube 
Cube  Cube  Cube 
Cube 
Cube 
Cube 
Cube 
Cube 
Cube 
Cube 
Cube  Cube  Cube Cube  Cube Cube  Cube 
Cube 
Duals to uniform polyhedra
V43 V3.82 V(3.4)2 V4.62 V34 V3.43 V4.6.8 V34.4 V33 V3.62 V35
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 

The cube is topologically related as a part of sequence of regular tilings, extending into the hyperbolic plane: {4,p}, p=3,4,5...

*n42 symmetry mutation of regular tilings: {4,n}
Spherical Euclidean Compact hyperbolic Paracompact
Cube 
{4,3}
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube 
{4,4}
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube 
{4,5}
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube 
{4,6}
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube 
{4,7}
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube 
{4,8}...
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube 
{4,∞}
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 

With dihedral symmetry, Dih4, the cube is topologically related in a series of uniform polyhedral and tilings 4.2n.2n, extending into the hyperbolic plane:

*n42 symmetry mutation of truncated tilings: 4.2n.2n
Symmetry
*n42
[n,4]
Spherical Euclidean Compact hyperbolic Paracomp.
*242
[2,4]
*342
[3,4]
*442
[4,4]
*542
[5,4]
*642
[6,4]
*742
[7,4]
*842
[8,4]...
*∞42
[∞,4]
Truncated
figures
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 
Config. 4.4.4 4.6.6 4.8.8 4.10.10 4.12.12 4.14.14 4.16.16 4.∞.∞
n-kis
figures
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 
Config. V4.4.4 V4.6.6 V4.8.8 V4.10.10 V4.12.12 V4.14.14 V4.16.16 V4.∞.∞

All these figures have octahedral symmetry.

The cube is a part of a sequence of rhombic polyhedra and tilings with [n,3] Coxeter group symmetry. The cube can be seen as a rhombic hexahedron where the rhombi are squares.

Symmetry mutations of dual quasiregular tilings: V(3.n)2
*n32 Spherical Euclidean Hyperbolic
*332 *432 *532 *632 *732 *832... *∞32
Tiling Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 
Conf. V(3.3)2 V(3.4)2 V(3.5)2 V(3.6)2 V(3.7)2 V(3.8)2 V(3.∞)2

The cube is a square prism:

Family of uniform n-gonal prisms
Prism name Digonal prism (Trigonal)
Triangular prism
(Tetragonal)
Square prism
Pentagonal prism Hexagonal prism Heptagonal prism Octagonal prism Enneagonal prism Decagonal prism Hendecagonal prism Dodecagonal prism ... Apeirogonal prism
Polyhedron image Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  ...
Spherical tiling image Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Plane tiling image Cube 
Vertex config. 2.4.4 3.4.4 4.4.4 5.4.4 6.4.4 7.4.4 8.4.4 9.4.4 10.4.4 11.4.4 12.4.4 ... ∞.4.4
Coxeter diagram Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  ... Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 

As a trigonal trapezohedron, the cube is related to the hexagonal dihedral symmetry family.

Uniform hexagonal dihedral spherical polyhedra
Symmetry: [6,2], (*622) [6,2]+, (622) [6,2+], (2*3)
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube  Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
{6,2} t{6,2} r{6,2} t{2,6} {2,6} rr{6,2} tr{6,2} sr{6,2} s{2,6}
Duals to uniforms
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 
V62 V122 V62 V4.4.6 V26 V4.4.6 V4.4.12 V3.3.3.6 V3.3.3.3
Regular and uniform compounds of cubes
Cube 
Compound of three cubes
Cube 
Compound of five cubes

In uniform honeycombs and polychora

It is an element of 9 of 28 convex uniform honeycombs:

Cubic honeycomb
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Truncated square prismatic honeycomb
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Snub square prismatic honeycomb
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Elongated triangular prismatic honeycomb Gyroelongated triangular prismatic honeycomb
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 
Cantellated cubic honeycomb
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cantitruncated cubic honeycomb
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Runcitruncated cubic honeycomb
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Runcinated alternated cubic honeycomb
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 

It is also an element of five four-dimensional uniform polychora:

Tesseract
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cantellated 16-cell
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Runcinated tesseract
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cantitruncated 16-cell
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Runcitruncated 16-cell
Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube Cube 
Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube  Cube 

Cubical graph

Cubical graph
Cube 
Named afterQ3
Vertices8
Edges12
Radius3
Diameter3
Girth4
Automorphisms48
Chromatic number2
PropertiesHamiltonian, regular, symmetric, distance-regular, distance-transitive, 3-vertex-connected, bipartite, planar graph
Table of graphs and parameters

The skeleton of the cube (the vertices and edges) forms a graph with 8 vertices and 12 edges, called the cube graph. It is a special case of the hypercube graph. It is one of 5 Platonic graphs, each a skeleton of its Platonic solid.

An extension is the three dimensional k-ARY Hamming graph, which for k = 2 is the cube graph. Graphs of this sort occur in the theory of parallel processing in computers.

See also

Notes

References

Works cited

Family An Bn I2(p) / Dn E6 / E7 / E8 / F4 / G2 Hn
Regular polygon Triangle Square p-gon Hexagon Pentagon
Uniform polyhedron Tetrahedron OctahedronCube Demicube DodecahedronIcosahedron
Uniform polychoron Pentachoron 16-cellTesseract Demitesseract 24-cell 120-cell600-cell
Uniform 5-polytope 5-simplex 5-orthoplex5-cube 5-demicube
Uniform 6-polytope 6-simplex 6-orthoplex6-cube 6-demicube 122221
Uniform 7-polytope 7-simplex 7-orthoplex7-cube 7-demicube 132231321
Uniform 8-polytope 8-simplex 8-orthoplex8-cube 8-demicube 142241421
Uniform 9-polytope 9-simplex 9-orthoplex9-cube 9-demicube
Uniform 10-polytope 10-simplex 10-orthoplex10-cube 10-demicube
Uniform n-polytope n-simplex n-orthoplexn-cube n-demicube 1k22k1k21 n-pentagonal polytope
Topics: Polytope familiesRegular polytopeList of regular polytopes and compounds

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