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{{Infobox toy
|name=Alexander's Star
|image=[[File:Alexander's Star.svg|220px]]
|type=[[mechanical puzzle|Puzzle]]
|inventor=Adam Alexander
|country=[[USA]]
|company=[[Ideal Toy Company]]
|from=1982
}}
[[Image:Alexander's Star.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Alexander's Star in a solved state.]]


'''Alexander's Star''' is a [[puzzle]] similar to the [[Rubik's Cube]], in the shape of a [[great dodecahedron]].


When hit with flight delays, most of us tend to just idly wander around the departure lounge staring blearily at oversized bars of Toblerone and deciding whether to blow the last of our trip money on a U-shaped neck pillow that will in no way improve the chances of sleeping on the plane.<br><br>Scroll down for the music video<br>But not Richard Dunn, when stuck overnight in Las Vegas' McCarran Airport he busied himself making a music video for [http://www.pcs-systems.co.uk/Images/celinebag.aspx Celine handbags] Dion's "All By Myself", [https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&gl=us&tbm=nws&q=complete complete] with improvised dolly tracking shot and bottom of the escalator 'fall to knees' for the crescendo.<br><br>Dunn admitted to having actually had a 'quite fun' time (the first recorded instance of this in an airport), getting behind the Delta check-in desks, crooning in those [http://Www.google.com/search?q=massage+chairs&btnI=lucky massage chairs] no-one actually uses and utilising the inherently cinematic horizontal escalators.<br><br>Explaining how he filmed himself despite being all alone in the airport, he wrote on his Vimeo page:<br><br>"I had a person behind a ticket counter give me a roll of luggage tape before she left. I then used a wheel chair that had a tall pole on the back of it and taped my iPhone to that. Then I would put it on the moving walkway for a dolly shot.<br>"I also used the extended handle on my computer bag and taped the iPhone to my handle. I would tuck different stuff under the bag to get the right angle.<br><br>"For the escalator shot I had to sprint up the steps after I got my shot so the computer bag didn�t hit the top and fall back down. Quite fun!"
==History==
 
Alexander's Star was invented by Adam Alexander, an American mathematician, in 1982. It was patented on 26 March 1985, with US patent number 4,506,891, and sold by the [[Ideal Toy Company]].
It came in two varieties: painted surfaces or stickers. Since the design of the puzzle practically forces the stickers to peel with continual use, the painted variety is likely a later edition.
 
==Description==
 
The puzzle has 30 moving pieces, which rotate in star-shaped groups of five around its outermost vertices. The purpose of the puzzle is to rearrange the moving pieces so that each star is surrounded by five faces of the same color, and opposite stars are surrounded by the same color. This is equivalent to solving just the edges of a six-color [[Megaminx]].
This is an odd puzzle to solve, and never really looks complete unless you know what you're looking for. The puzzle is solved when each pair of parallel planes is made up of only one colour. To see a plane, however, you have to look "past" the five pieces on top of it, all of which could/should have different colours than the plane you're solving.
 
==Permutations==
There are 30 edges, each of which can be flipped into two positions, giving a theoretical maximum of 30!×2<sup>30</sup> permutations. This value is not reached for the following reasons:
# Only even permutations of edges are possible, reducing the possible edge arrangements to 30!/2.
# The orientation of the last edge is determined by the orientation of the other edges, reducing the number of edge orientations to 2<sup>29</sup>.
# Since opposite sides of the solved puzzle are the same color, each edge piece has a duplicate. It would be impossible to swap all 15 pairs (an odd permutation), so a reducing factor of 2<sup>14</sup> is applied.
# The orientation of the puzzle does not matter (since there are no fixed face centers to serve as reference points), dividing the final total by 60. There are 60 possible positions and orientations of the first edge, but all of them are equivalent because of the lack of face centers.
 
This gives a total of <math>\frac{30!\times 2^{15}}{120} \approx 7.24\times 10^{34}</math> possible combinations.
 
The precise figure is 72 431 714 252 715 638 411 621 302 272 000 000 (roughly 72.4 decillion on the [[names of large numbers|short scale]] or 72.4 quintilliard on the long scale).
 
==See also==
*[[Rubik's Cube]]
*[[Combination puzzles]]
*[[Mechanical puzzles]]
 
==External links==
*[http://www.jaapsch.net/puzzles/alexandr.htm Description and solution]
 
{{Rubik's Cube}}
 
[[Category:Puzzles]]
[[Category:Mechanical puzzles]]
[[Category:Combination puzzles]]
[[Category:Ideal Toy Company]]

Latest revision as of 19:54, 6 November 2013

Template:Infobox toy

Alexander's Star in a solved state.

Alexander's Star is a puzzle similar to the Rubik's Cube, in the shape of a great dodecahedron.

History

Alexander's Star was invented by Adam Alexander, an American mathematician, in 1982. It was patented on 26 March 1985, with US patent number 4,506,891, and sold by the Ideal Toy Company. It came in two varieties: painted surfaces or stickers. Since the design of the puzzle practically forces the stickers to peel with continual use, the painted variety is likely a later edition.

Description

The puzzle has 30 moving pieces, which rotate in star-shaped groups of five around its outermost vertices. The purpose of the puzzle is to rearrange the moving pieces so that each star is surrounded by five faces of the same color, and opposite stars are surrounded by the same color. This is equivalent to solving just the edges of a six-color Megaminx. This is an odd puzzle to solve, and never really looks complete unless you know what you're looking for. The puzzle is solved when each pair of parallel planes is made up of only one colour. To see a plane, however, you have to look "past" the five pieces on top of it, all of which could/should have different colours than the plane you're solving.

Permutations

There are 30 edges, each of which can be flipped into two positions, giving a theoretical maximum of 30!×230 permutations. This value is not reached for the following reasons:

  1. Only even permutations of edges are possible, reducing the possible edge arrangements to 30!/2.
  2. The orientation of the last edge is determined by the orientation of the other edges, reducing the number of edge orientations to 229.
  3. Since opposite sides of the solved puzzle are the same color, each edge piece has a duplicate. It would be impossible to swap all 15 pairs (an odd permutation), so a reducing factor of 214 is applied.
  4. The orientation of the puzzle does not matter (since there are no fixed face centers to serve as reference points), dividing the final total by 60. There are 60 possible positions and orientations of the first edge, but all of them are equivalent because of the lack of face centers.

This gives a total of 30!×2151207.24×1034 possible combinations.

The precise figure is 72 431 714 252 715 638 411 621 302 272 000 000 (roughly 72.4 decillion on the short scale or 72.4 quintilliard on the long scale).

See also

External links

Template:Rubik's Cube