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Bridges 2007, San Sebastian Bridges 2007, San Sebastian Symmetric Embedding of Locally Regular Hyperbolic Tilings Carlo H. S Carlo H. S é é quin quin EECS Computer Science Division EECS Computer Science Division University of California, Berkeley University of California, Berkeley

Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

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Bridges 2007, San Sebastian. Carlo H. S é quin EECS Computer Science Division University of California, Berkeley. Symmetric Embedding of Locally Regular Hyperbolic Tilings. Goal of This Study. Make Escher-tilings on surfaces of higher genus. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Bridges 2007, San SebastianBridges 2007, San Sebastian

Symmetric Embedding of

Locally Regular Hyperbolic Tilings

Carlo H. SCarlo H. Sééquinquin

EECS Computer Science DivisionEECS Computer Science DivisionUniversity of California, BerkeleyUniversity of California, Berkeley

Page 2: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Goal of This StudyGoal of This Study

Make Escher-tilings on surfaces of higher genus.

in the plane on the sphere on the torus

M.C. Escher Jane Yen, 1997 Young Shon, 2002

Page 3: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

How to Make an Escher TilingHow to Make an Escher Tiling

Start from a regular tiling

Distort all equivalent edges in the same way

Page 4: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Hyperbolic Escher TilingsHyperbolic Escher Tilings

All tiles are “the same” . . .

truly identical from the same mold

on curved surfaces topologically identical

Tilings should be “regular” . . .

locally regular: all p-gons, all vertex valences v

globally regular: full flag-transitive symmetry(flag = combination: vertex-edge-face)

Page 5: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

““168 Butterflies,” D. Dunham (2002) 168 Butterflies,” D. Dunham (2002)

Locally regular {3,7} tiling on a genus-3 surfacemade from 56 isosceles triangles

“snub-tetrahedron”

Page 6: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

E. Schulte and J. M. WillsE. Schulte and J. M. Wills

Also: 56 triangles, meeting in 24 valence-7 vertices.

But: Globally regular tiling with 168 automorphisms! (topological)

Page 7: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Generator for {3,7} Tilings on Genus-3Generator for {3,7} Tilings on Genus-3

Twist arms by multiples of 90 degrees ...

Page 8: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Dehn TwistsDehn Twists

Make a closed cut around a tunnel (hole) or around a (torroidal) arm.

Twist the two adjoining “shores” against each other by 360 degrees; and reconnect.

Network connectivity stays the same;but embedding in 3-space has changed.

Page 9: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Fractional Dehn TwistsFractional Dehn Twists

If the network structure around an arm or around a hole has some periodicity P,then we can apply some fractional Dehn twistsin increments of 360° / P.

This will lead to new network topologies,but may maintain local regularity.

Page 10: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Globally Regular {3,7} TilingGlobally Regular {3,7} Tiling

From genus-3 generator (use 90° twist)

Equivalent to Schulte & Wills polyhedron

Page 11: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

56 triangles

24 vertices

genus 3

globally regular

168 automorph.

Smoothed Smoothed Triangulated Triangulated SurfaceSurface

Page 12: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Generalization of GeneratorGeneralization of Generator

Turn straight frame edges into flexible tubes

Page 13: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

From 3-way to 4-way JunctionsFrom 3-way to 4-way Junctions

Tetrahedral hubs

6(12)-sided arms

Page 14: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

6-way Junction + Three 8-sided Loops6-way Junction + Three 8-sided Loops

Page 15: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Construction of Junction ElementsConstruction of Junction Elements

3-way junction

construction of

6-way junction

Page 16: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Junction Elements Junction Elements Decorated with Decorated with 6, 12, 24, Heptagons6, 12, 24, Heptagons

Page 17: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Assembly of Higher-Genus SurfacesAssembly of Higher-Genus Surfaces

Genus 5:8 Y-junctions

Genus 7

Page 18: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Genus-5 Surface (Cube Frame)Genus-5 Surface (Cube Frame)

112 triangles, 3 butterflies each . . .

Page 19: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

336

Butterflies

Page 20: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Creating Smooth SurfacesCreating Smooth Surfaces

4-step process:

Triangle mesh

Subdivision surface

Refine until smooth

Texture-map tiling design

Page 21: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Texture-Mapped Single-Color Tilings

subdivide also texture coordinates

maps pattern smoothly onto curved surface.

Page 22: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

What About Differently Colored Tiles ?What About Differently Colored Tiles ?

How many different tiles need to be designed ?

Page 23: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

24 Newts on the Tetrus (2006)24 Newts on the Tetrus (2006)

One of 12 tiles

3 different color combinations

Page 24: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Use with Higher-Genus SurfacesUse with Higher-Genus Surfaces

Lack freedom to assign colors at will !

Page 25: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

New Escher Tile Editor

Tiles need not be just simple n-gons.

Morph edges of one boundary . . .and let all other tiles change similarly!

Page 26: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Escher Tile Editor (cont.)Escher Tile Editor (cont.)

Key differences:

Tiling pattern is no longer just a texture!

Tiles have a well-defined boundary,which is tracked in subdivision process.

This outline can be flood filled with color.

Page 27: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Escher Tile Editor (cont.)Escher Tile Editor (cont.)

Possible to add extra decorations onto tiles

Page 28: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Prototile Extraction

Flood-fill can also be used to identify all geometry that belongs to a single tile.

Page 29: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Extract Prototile Geometry for RPExtract Prototile Geometry for RP

Two prototiles extracted and thickened

Page 30: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Generalizing the Generator to QuadsGeneralizing the Generator to Quads

4-way junctions built around cube hubs

4-sided prismatic arms

Page 31: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Genus 7 Surface with 60 QuadsGenus 7 Surface with 60 Quads

No twist

Page 32: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

{5,4} Starfish Pattern on Genus-7{5,4} Starfish Pattern on Genus-7

Polyhedral representation of an octahedral frame

108 quadrilaterals (some are half-tiles)

60 identical quad tiles:

Use dual pattern:

48 pentagonal starfish

Page 33: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Only Two Geometrically Different TilesOnly Two Geometrically Different Tiles

Inner and outer starfish prototiles extracted,

thickened by offsetting,

sent to FDM machine . . .

Page 34: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Fresh from the FDM MachineFresh from the FDM Machine

Page 35: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Red Tile Set -- 1 of 6 ColorsRed Tile Set -- 1 of 6 Colors

Page 36: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

2 Outer and 2 Inner Tiles2 Outer and 2 Inner Tiles

Page 37: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

A Whole Pile of Tiles . . .A Whole Pile of Tiles . . .

Page 38: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

The Assembly of Tiles Begins . . .The Assembly of Tiles Begins . . .

Outer tiles

Inner tiles

Page 39: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

AssemblyAssembly(cont.):(cont.):

8 Inner Tiles8 Inner Tiles

Forming inner part of octa-frame edge

Page 40: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Assembly (cont.)Assembly (cont.) 2 Hubs

+ Octaframe edge

12 tiles inside view

8 tiles

Page 41: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

More Assembly StepsMore Assembly Steps

Page 42: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

More Assembly StepsMore Assembly Steps

Page 43: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Assembly Gets More DifficultAssembly Gets More Difficult

Page 44: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Almost Done ...Almost Done ...

Page 45: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

The Finished Genus-7 ObjectThe Finished Genus-7 Object

. . . I wish . . .

“work in progress . . .”

Page 46: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

What about What about Globally RegularGlobally Regular Tilings ? Tilings ?

So far:

Method and tool set to make complex, locally regular tilings on higher-genus surfaces.

Page 47: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

BRIDGES, London, 2006BRIDGES, London, 2006

“Eight-fold Way” by Helaman Ferguson

Page 48: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Visualization of Klein’s Quartic in 3DVisualization of Klein’s Quartic in 3D

24 heptagons 24 heptagons

on a genus-3 surface;on a genus-3 surface;

24x7 automorphisms24x7 automorphisms

(= maximum possible)(= maximum possible)

Page 49: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

AnotherAnother View ... View ...

168 fish

Page 50: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Why Is It Called: “Eight-fold Way” ?Why Is It Called: “Eight-fold Way” ?

Since it is a regular polyhedral structure, it has a set of Petrie Polygons.

These are “zig-zag” skew polygons that always hug a face for exactly 2 consecutive edges.

On a regular polyhedron you can start such a Petrie polygon from any vertex in any direction.(A good test for regularity !)

On the Klein Quartic, the length of these Petrie polygons is always eight edges.

Page 51: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Why Is It “Special”Why Is It “Special”

The Klein quartic has the maximal number of automorphisms possible on a genus-3 surface.

A. Hurwitz showed: Upper limit is: 84(genus-1)

Can only be reached for genus 3, 7, 14, ...

Temptation to try to explore the genus-7 case

Page 52: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

My Original Plan for Bridges 2007My Original Plan for Bridges 2007

Explore the genus-7 case

Make a nice sculpture modelin the spirit of the “8-fold Way”

This requires 2 steps:

A) figure out the complete connectivity (map mesh on the Poincaré disc)

B) embed it on a genus-7 surface(while maximizing 3D symmetry)

Page 53: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

PoincarPoincaréé DiscDisc

Find some numbering that repeats periodically and produces the proper Petrie length.

Page 54: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Step 2: What Shape to Choose ?Step 2: What Shape to Choose ?

Page 55: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Tubular Genus-7 SurfacesTubular Genus-7 Surfaces

12 x 3-way 6 x 4-way 3 x 6-way

Page 56: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Symmetrical {3,7} Maps on Genus-7Symmetrical {3,7} Maps on Genus-7

Option Junctnvalence

Junctn count

Junction triangles

Arm prism #

Arm count

Arm triangles

A –prism 3-sided

3 12 24 4 18 144

B –tetra 4 6 24 6 12 144

C 5 4 28 7 10 140

D –cube 6 3 24 8 9 144

E –octa 8 2 24 9 8 144

F 14 1 0 12 7 168

Page 57: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Genus-7Genus-7Paper ModelsPaper Models

Page 58: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Genus-7 Styrofoam ModelsGenus-7 Styrofoam Models

Page 59: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Try Something Simpler First !Try Something Simpler First !

Banff 2007 Workshop “Teaching Math …”

Page 60: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Globally Regular Tiling With 24 PentagonsGlobally Regular Tiling With 24 Pentagons

Thanks to David Richter !

Actual cardboard model

Page 61: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

The Dodeca-DodecahedronThe Dodeca-Dodecahedron

6 sets of 4 parallel faces:

2 large pentagons + 2 smaller pentagrams

Page 62: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Locally Regular Maps {4,5} and {5,4}Locally Regular Maps {4,5} and {5,4}

Dual coverage of a genus 4 surface:

30 quadrilaterals versus 24 pentagons

PP > 6

Page 63: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Escher Escher TilingTiling

With texture mapping

Page 64: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Another Repetitive Texture ...Another Repetitive Texture ...

3 Fish

Page 65: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Looking for the Globally Regular TilingLooking for the Globally Regular Tiling

Try to find a suitable network by applying fractional Dehn twists to the “spokes”.

Use the same amount on all arms to maintain 4-fold rotational symmetry.

Page 66: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Other Shapes StudiedOther Shapes Studied

Lawson surface --- “Prism +4 handles”

Page 67: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

ExperimetsExperimets

Apply fractional Dehn twists to all these structures,

check for proper length of Petrie polygon.

No success with any of them ...

Page 68: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Inspiration from Symmetry . . . Inspiration from Symmetry . . .

Look for shapes that have 3-fold and 4-fold symmetries . . .

Page 69: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Truncated OctahedronTruncated Octahedron

1st try: Four hexagonal prismatic tunnels

Try different fractional Dehn twists in tunnels

Page 70: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Checking Globally RegularityChecking Globally Regularity

Transfer connectivity and coloring pattern

No cigar !

These six vertices are the same as the ones on the bottom

Page 71: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Inspiration from Inspiration from 8-fold Way8-fold Way On Tetrus: Petrie polygons zig-zag around arms

Let Petrie polygons zig-zag around tunnel walls

It works !!!

Page 72: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Add a Nice Coloring PatternAdd a Nice Coloring Pattern

Use 5 colors

Every color is at every vertex

Every quad is surrounded by the other 4 colors

Page 73: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

ConclusionsConclusions

I have not yet found my “Holy Grail”

Gained insight about locally regular tilings

Used “multi media” in my explorations

Remaining question:

what are good ways to find the desired mapping to a symmetrical embedding ?

How does one search / test for global graph regularity ?

Page 74: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Thanks toThanks to

David Richter {S5 dodedadodecahedron}

John M. Sullivan {feedback on paper}

Pushkar Joshi (graduate student)

Allan Lee, Amy Wang (undergraduates)

Page 75: Bridges 2007, San Sebastian

Questions ?Questions ?

?