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Making Dice, Part 2 (Posted on 2003-04-17) Difficulty: 3 of 5
My friend finished making dodecahedrons, and her next project is to make regular icosahedrons (20-sided dice). Again she wants to know: what is the dihedral angle between any two adjacent faces?

Perhaps this can be solved without the use of spherical trig? ;P

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

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Solution Solution | Comment 9 of 10 |
It's time for some of my random and indiscriminate puzzle-solving!

Edit: I found out that I had made a mistake.  F cannot be directly above C, so I'm off by a degree.  I'd fix it, but then I might as well rewrite the whole thing.  Oh well...  It's not like, say, English class, where it's mandatory for me to write this.  Speaking of which, I have an English paper to write.

If you take a cross-section of an icosahedron, straight down the middle, you can get a regular decagon. The angles are, of course 144 degrees each.  But these are not the dihedral angles!  The cross section is goes right through the middle of a row of triangles arranged in a way similar to the below diagram:
   ____________ 
/\ /\ /
/ \ / \ /
/____\/____\/

The next diagram is merely for labeling points.

     __________E
/\ /
/ \ /
A B C
/ \ /
D________\/

Now let's look at the same triangle from a different point of view.  The triangle that includes A, B, and D is on the horizontal plane, the other is bent slightly downward.  For simplicity, let's say the side of the triangle is 1 unit long.

Let's extend line AB to point F, which is right above C.  BCF is a right triangle.  Angle FBC is 36 degrees and BC is 1/2.  CF must be sin(36 deg.)/2.

Let's extend line DB to point G, right above E.  EG must be sin(36 deg.) because E is twice the distance below the horizontal that C is.  BGE is another right triangle, and BE equals sqrt(3)/2.  Using trig, angle GBE must be asin(2*sin(36 deg.)/sqrt(3)).

The dihedral angle, DBE is of course 180 deg.-asin(2*sin(36 deg.)/sqrt(3))  This is equal to about 137.2566 degrees or 2.3956 radians.

Edited on January 14, 2005, 3:19 am

Edited on January 14, 2005, 4:11 am
  Posted by Tristan on 2005-01-14 03:16:59

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