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A flat ball? (Posted on 2004-04-08) Difficulty: 2 of 5
Soccer balls are usually covered with a design based on regular pentagons and hexagons.

How many pentagons/hexagons MUST there be, and why?

See The Solution Submitted by Federico Kereki    
Rating: 3.7500 (4 votes)

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Solution re: My thoughts | Comment 3 of 25 |
(In reply to My thoughts by Bryan)

We can note that a standard soccer ball is (equivalently) analogous to a regular icosahedron or a regular dodecahedron (both Platonic Solids).

The former has 20 (triangular) sides, and the latter has 12 (pentagonal) sides.

In the former case, we "place" a pentagon centered on each of 12 vertices and a hexagon centered on each of 20 faces. (This means 12 pentagons and 20 hexagons.)

In the latter case, we "place" a hexagon centered on each of 20 vertices and a pentagon centered on each of 12 faces. (Again, this means 12 pentagons and 20 hexagons.)
______________________

Bryan is correct... there is no reason that it MUST be modeled in this way.
  Posted by Thalamus on 2004-04-08 15:30:20

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