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Shortest distance (Posted on 2003-12-10) Difficulty: 3 of 5
What is the shortest distance between two opposite points (two vertices separated by 2R) in the surface of a regular icosahedron? The regular icosahedron's edges are 1ft in length.

See The Solution Submitted by Antonio    
Rating: 4.0000 (2 votes)

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Solution re: Solution (details) | Comment 3 of 16 |
(In reply to Solution by Brian Wainscott)

OK, just wanted to get that in before someone else posted a solution. I'm pretty sure it it correct. Here is my method:

Since the whole thing is made up of equalateral triangles, you can take a portion of it and flatten it out in the plane. I can't draw a picture here, but I'll try to describe it.

Place one of the faces of the icosahedron on the plane, with a point at (0,0) the other corners at (+/- 0.5, sqrt(3)/2). Then unfold the icosahedron from there, so you get a triangular tiling of the plane. If the (0,0) point was the bottom of the icosahedron, the point at (0.5, 3*sqrt(3)/2) corresponds to the top point. The distance between them in the plane will be the same as the distance on the surface. This distance is sqrt(1/4+9*3/4)=sqrt(7).
  Posted by Brian Wainscott on 2003-12-10 15:49:50

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