A four-dimensional hypercube has vertices connecting 4 edges, each edge 90 degrees apart from each other. Each edge is 1 unit long. Find the 3-d surface volume of this cube. Find the 2-d surface area. Find the sum of the lengths of all the edges.
Find a general equation for the s-dimensional surface area of an c-dimensional cube with one unit side length. For example, if s=1 and c=3, you're finding the sum of the length of the edges of a normal cube.
A c-dimensional unit cube may be described as the set of all vectors of the form a1*e1+a2*e2+...+ac*ec where e1,e2,...,ec are orthogonal unit vectors, one in the direction of each coordinate axis, and a1,a2,...,ac are real numbers that vary over the closed interval [0,1]. The vertices, edges, faces, cubic faces, ..., s-dimensional faces, ..., are formed by fixing the elements of subsets of size c-s from {a1,a2,...,ac} at values 0 or 1 and letting the others (s in number) vary over [0,1]. The number of such subsets is clearly (c,c-s)=(c,s), and since each subset member can be set to either 0 or 1, there are exactly (c,s)*2^(c-s) different s-dimensional faces, each of unit s-dimensional "area" (or "content" as it is usually called). This is the same result as Iain found, and gives the same numbers as Charlie's table.Edited on March 21, 2004, 10:22 pm
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Posted by Richard
on 2004-03-20 20:02:54 |