Compound of twelve tetrahedra with rotational freedom explained

bgcolor=#e7dcc3 colspan=2Compound of twelve tetrahedra with rotational freedom
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TypeUniform compound
IndexUC2
Polyhedra12 tetrahedra
Faces48 triangles
Edges72
Vertices48
Symmetry groupoctahedral (Oh)
Subgroup restricting to one constituent4-fold improper rotation (S4)
This uniform polyhedron compound is a symmetric arrangement of 12 tetrahedra, considered as antiprisms. It can be constructed by superimposing six identical copies of the stella octangula, and then rotating them in pairs about the three axes that pass through the centres of two opposite cubic faces. Each stella octangula is rotated by an equal (and opposite, within a pair) angle θ. Equivalently, a stella octangula may be inscribed within each cube in the compound of six cubes with rotational freedom, which has the same vertices as this compound.

When θ = 0, all six stella octangula coincide. When θ is 45 degrees, the stella octangula coincide in pairs yielding (two superimposed copies of) the compound of six tetrahedra.

References