Math for a geodesic sphere

Marcelo Cantos picture Marcelo Cantos · Jun 13, 2010 · Viewed 12.3k times · Source

I'm trying to create a very specific geodesic tessellation, but I can't find anything online about it.

It is normal to subdivide the triangles of an icosahedron into triangle patches and project them onto the sphere. However, I noticed an animated GIF on the Wikipedia entry for Geodesic Domes that appears not to follow this scheme. Geodesic spheres generally comprise a mixture of mostly hexagonal triangle patches, with pentagonal patches forming at the vertices of the original icosahedron; in most cases, these pentagons are linked together; that is, following a straight edge from the center of one pentagon leads to the center of another pentagon. In the Wikipedia animation, however, the edge from the center of one pentagon doesn't appear to intersect the center of an adjacent pentagons; instead it intersects the side of the other pentagon.

Where can I go to learn about the math behind this particular geometry? Ideally, I'd like to know of an algorithm for generating such tessellations.

Answer

TaffGoch picture TaffGoch · Jun 13, 2010

Marcelo,

The most-commonly employed geodesic tessellations are either Class-I or Class-II. The image you reference is of a Class-III tessellation, more-specifically, 4v{3,1}. The classes can be diagrammed, so:

Geodesic Division

Class-III tessellations are chiral, and can have left-handed or right-handed twist. Here's the mirror-image of the sample you referenced:

Class III, 4v{1,3}

You can find some 3D models of Class-III spheres, at Google's 3D Warehouse: http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/cldetails?mid=b926c2713e303860a99d92cd8fe533cd

Being properly identified should get you off to a good start.

Feel free to stop by the Geodesic Help Group; http://groups.google.com/group/GeodesicHelp?hl=en

TaffGoch