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{{Even polygon db|Even polygon stat table|p6}}
In [[geometry]], a '''hexagon''' (from [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] ἕξ ''hex'', "six" and γωνία, gonía, "corner, angle") is a [[polygon]] with six edges and six [[Vertex (geometry)|vertices]]. A regular hexagon has [[Schläfli symbol]] {6}. The total of the internal angles of any hexagon is 720°.  


==Hexagonal structures==
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From bees' [[honeycomb]]s to the [[Giant's Causeway]], hexagonal patterns are prevalent in nature due to their efficiency. In a [[hexagonal grid]] each line is as short as it can possibly be if a large area is to be filled with the fewest number of hexagons. This means that honeycombs require less [[wax]] to construct and gain lots of strength under [[compression (physical)|compression]].
 
==Regular hexagon==
[[Image:Regular Hexagon Inscribed in a Circle 240px.gif|left|frame|A step-by-step animation of the construction of a regular hexagon  using [[compass and straightedge]], given by [[Euclid]]'s ''[[Euclid's Elements|Elements]]'', Book IV, Proposition 15.]]
A regular hexagon has all sides of the same length, and all internal [[angle]]s are 120 [[degree (angle)|degrees]]. A regular hexagon has 6 [[rotational symmetries]] (''rotational symmetry of order six'') and 6 [[reflection symmetries]] (''six lines of symmetry''), making up the [[dihedral group]] D<sub>6</sub>. The longest diagonals of a regular hexagon, connecting diametrically opposite vertices, are twice the length of one side. From this it can be seen that a [[triangle]] with a vertex at the center of the regular hexagon and sharing one side with the hexagon is [[equilateral triangle|equilateral]], and that the regular hexagon can be partitioned into six equilateral triangles.
 
Like [[square (geometry)|square]]s and [[equilateral]] [[triangle]]s, regular hexagons fit together without any gaps to ''tile the plane'' (three hexagons meeting at every vertex), and so are useful for constructing [[tessellation]]s. The cells of a [[beehive (beekeeping)|beehive]] [[honeycomb]] are hexagonal for this reason and because the shape makes efficient use of space and building materials. The [[Voronoi diagram]] of a regular triangular lattice is the honeycomb tessellation of hexagons. It is not usually considered a [[Equilateral polygon|triambus]], although it is equilateral.
 
The area of a regular hexagon of side length ''t'' is given by
:<math>A = \frac{3 \sqrt{3}}{2}t^2 \simeq 2.598076211 t^2.</math>
 
An alternative formula for area is {{nowrap|''A'' {{=}} ''1.5dt''}} where the length ''d'' is the distance between the parallel sides (also referred to as the flat-to-flat distance), or the height of the hexagon when it sits on one side as base, or the diameter of the [[inscribed]] circle.
 
Another alternative formula for the area if only the flat-to-flat distance, d, is known, is given by
:<math>A = \frac{ \sqrt{3}}{2} d^2 \simeq 0.866025404d^2.</math>
 
The area can also be found by the formulas <math>A=ap/2</math> and <math>\scriptstyle A\ =\ {2}a^2\sqrt{3}\ \simeq\ 3.464102 a^2</math>, where ''a'' is the [[apothem]] and ''p'' is the perimeter.
 
The perimeter of a regular hexagon of side length ''t'' is 6''t'', its maximal diameter 2''t'', and its minimal diameter <math>\scriptstyle d\ =\ t\sqrt{3}</math>.
 
If a regular hexagon has successive vertices A, B, C, D, E, F and if P is any point on the circumscribing circle between B and C, then {{nowrap|PE + PF {{=}} PA + PB + PC + PD}}.
 
==Cyclic hexagon==
A cyclic hexagon is any hexagon inscribed in a circle. If the successive sides of the cyclic hexagon are ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'', ''e'', ''f'', then the three main diagonals intersect in a single point if and only if {{nowrap|''ace'' {{=}} ''bdf''}}.<ref>Cartensen, Jens, "About hexagons", ''Mathematical Spectrum'' 33(2) (2000-2001), 37-40.</ref>
 
==Hexagon inscribed in a conic section==
[[Pascal's theorem]] (also known as the "Hexagrammum Mysticum Theorem") states that if an arbitrary hexagon is inscribed in any [[conic section]], and pairs of opposite sides are extended until they meet, the three intersection points will lie on a straight line, the "Pascal line" of that configuration.
 
==Hexagon tangential to a conic section==
Let ABCDEF be a hexagon formed by six [[tangent line]]s of a conic section. Then [[Brianchon's theorem]] states that the three main diagonals AD, BE, and CF intersect at a single point.
 
In a hexagon that is [[tangential polygon|tangential to a circle]] and that has consecutive sides ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', ''d'', ''e'', and ''f'',<ref>Gutierrez, Antonio, "Hexagon, Inscribed Circle, Tangent, Semiperimeter", [http://gogeometry.com/problem/p343_circumscribed_hexagon_tangent_semiperimeter.htm], Accessed 2012-04-17.</ref>
 
::<math>a+c+e=b+d+f.</math>
 
==Related figures==
{| class="wikitable" style="width:640px;"
|- valign=top
|[[Image:Truncated triangle.png|160px]]<br>A regular hexagon can also be created as a [[Truncation (geometry)|truncated]] [[equilateral triangle]], with Schläfli symbol t{3}. This form only has D<sub>3</sub> symmetry. In this figure, the remaining edges of the original triangle are drawn blue, and new edges from the truncation are red.
|[[Image:Hexagram.svg|160px]]<br>The [[hexagram]] can be created as a [[stellation]] process: extending the 6 edges of a regular hexagon until they meet at 6 new vertices.
|[[File:Medial triambic icosahedron face.png|160px]]<br>A concave hexagon
|[[File:Great triambic icosahedron face.png|160px]]<br>A self-intersecting hexagon ([[star polygon]])
|[[File:Cube petrie polygon sideview.png|160px]]<br>A (nonplanar) [[skew regular polygon|skew regular hexagon]], within the edges of a [[cube]]
|}
 
===Petrie polygons===
The regular hexagon is the [[Petrie polygon]] for these [[regular polytope|regular]] and [[uniform polytope]]s, shown in these skew [[orthogonal projection]]s:
 
{| class="wikitable" style="width:360px;"
|- align=center
!colspan=2|(3D)
!colspan=3|(5D)
|- align=center
|[[File:Cube petrie.png|120px]]<br>[[Cube]]
|[[File:Octahedron petrie.png|120px]]<br>[[Octahedron]]
|[[Image:5-simplex t0.svg|120px]]<br>[[5-simplex]]
|[[Image:5-simplex t1.svg|120px]]<br>[[Rectified 5-simplex]]
|[[Image:5-simplex t2.svg|120px]]<br>[[Birectified 5-simplex]]
|}
 
===Polyhedra with hexagons===
There is no [[Platonic solid]] made of only regular hexagons, because the hexagons [[tessellation|tessellate]], not allowing the result to "fold up". The [[Archimedean solid]]s with some hexagonal faces are the [[truncated tetrahedron]], [[truncated octahedron]], [[truncated icosahedron]] (of [[soccer]] ball and [[fullerene]] fame), [[truncated cuboctahedron]] and the [[truncated icosidodecahedron]]. These hexagons can be considered [[truncation (geometry)|truncated]] triangles, with [[Coxeter diagram]]s of the form {{CDD|node_1|3|node_1|p|node}} and {{CDD|node_1|3|node_1|p|node_1}}.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="width:500px;"
|+ [[Archimedean solid]]s
|-
![[Tetrahedral symmetry|Tetrahedral]]
!colspan=2|[[Octahedral symmetry|Octahedral]]
!colspan=2|[[Icosahedral symmetry|Icosahedral]]
|- align=center
|{{CDD|node_1|3|node_1|3|node}}
|{{CDD|node_1|3|node_1|4|node}}
|{{CDD|node_1|3|node_1|4|node_1}}
|{{CDD|node_1|3|node_1|5|node}}
|{{CDD|node_1|3|node_1|5|node_1}}
|- valign=top align=center
|[[File:truncated tetrahedron.png|100px]]<br>[[truncated tetrahedron]]
|[[File:truncated octahedron.png|100px]]<br>[[truncated octahedron]]
|[[File:Great rhombicuboctahedron.png|100px]]<br>[[truncated cuboctahedron]]
|[[File:truncated icosahedron.png|100px]]<br>[[truncated icosahedron]]
|[[File:Great rhombicosidodecahedron.png|100px]]<br>[[truncated icosidodecahedron]]
|}
 
There are other symmetry polyhedra with stretched or flattened hexagons, like these [[Goldberg polyhedron]] G(2,0):
{| class=wikitable
|-
![[Tetrahedral symmetry|Tetrahedral]]
![[Octahedral symmetry|Octahedral]]
![[Icosahedral symmetry|Icosahedral]]
|- align=center
|[[File:Alternate truncated cube.png|120px]]<BR>[[Chamfered tetrahedron]]
|[[File:Truncated rhombic dodecahedron2.png|120px]]<BR>[[Chamfered cube]]
|[[File:Truncated rhombic triacontahedron.png|120px]]<BR>[[Chamfered dodecahedron]]
|}
 
 
There are also 9 [[Johnson solid]]s with regular hexagons:
{| class=wikitable width=400
|- valign=top
|[[File:Triangular cupola.png|80px]]<BR>[[triangular cupola]]
|[[File:Elongated triangular cupola.png|80px]]<BR>[[elongated triangular cupola]]
|[[File:Gyroelongated triangular cupola.png|80px]]<BR>[[gyroelongated triangular cupola]]
|- valign=top
|[[File:Augmented hexagonal prism.png|80px]]<BR>[[augmented hexagonal prism]]
|[[File:Parabiaugmented hexagonal prism.png|80px]]<BR>[[parabiaugmented hexagonal prism]]
|[[File:Metabiaugmented hexagonal prism.png|80px]]<BR>[[metabiaugmented hexagonal prism]]
|[[File:Triaugmented hexagonal prism.png|80px]]<BR>[[triaugmented hexagonal prism]]
|- valign=top
|[[File:Augmented truncated tetrahedron.png|80px]]<BR>[[augmented truncated tetrahedron]]
|[[File:Triangular hebesphenorotunda.png|80px]]<BR>[[triangular hebesphenorotunda]]
|}
 
{| class="wikitable" style="width:300px;"
|+ [[Prismoid]]s
|- valign=top align=center
|[[File:Hexagonal prism.png|100px]]<br>[[Hexagonal prism]]
|[[File:Hexagonal antiprism.png|100px]]<br>[[Hexagonal antiprism]]
|[[File:Hexagonal pyramid.png|100px]]<br>[[Hexagonal pyramid]]
|}
 
{| class="wikitable"
|+Other symmetric polyhedral with hexagons
|- valign=top align=center
|[[File:Truncated triakis tetrahedron.png|100px]]<br>[[Truncated triakis tetrahedron]]
|[[File:Hexpenttri near-miss Johnson solid.png|100px]]
|}
 
===Regular and uniform tilings with hexagons===
{| class="wikitable" style="width:480px;"
|- valign=top
|[[Image:Uniform tiling 63-t0.png|160px]]<br>The [[Hexagonal tiling|hexagon]] can form a regular tessellate the plane with a [[Schläfli symbol]] {6,3}, having 3 hexagons around every vertex.
|[[Image:Uniform tiling 63-t12.png|160px]]<br>A second hexagonal tessellation of the plane can be formed as a truncated [[triangular tiling]] or [[rhombille tiling]], with one of three hexagons colored differently.
|[[Image:Uniform tiling 333-t012.png|160px]]<br>A third tessellation of the plane can be formed with three colored hexagons around every vertex.
|- valign=top
|[[Image:Uniform tiling 63-t1.png|160px]]<br>[[Trihexagonal tiling]]
|[[Image:Uniform tiling 333-t01.png|160px]]<br>[[Trihexagonal tiling]]
|- valign=top
|[[Image:Uniform polyhedron-63-t02.png|160px]]<br>[[Rhombitrihexagonal tiling]]
|[[Image:Uniform polyhedron-63-t012.png|160px]]<br>[[Truncated trihexagonal tiling]]
|}
 
==Hexagons: natural and human-made==
<gallery>
Image:Graphen.jpg|The ideal crystalline structure of [[graphene]] is a hexagonal grid.
Image:Assembled E-ELT mirror segments undergoing testing.jpg|Assembled [[E-ELT]] mirror segments
Image:Honey comb.jpg|A beehive [[honeycomb]]
Image:Carapax.svg|The scutes of a turtle's [[carapace]]
Image:Saturn hexagonal north pole feature.jpg|North polar hexagonal cloud feature on [[Saturn]], discovered by [[Voyager 1]] and confirmed in 2006 by [[Cassini-Huygens|Cassini]] [http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/multimedia/pia09188.html] [http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/media/cassini-20070327.html] [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=1988Icar...76..335G&db_key=AST&data_type=HTML&format=]
Image:Iapetusnorth.jpg|The third largest moon of Saturn, [[Iapetus (moon)|Iapetus]]'s North pole as pictured by the [[Cassini–Huygens|Cassini]] probe.[http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA06167]
Image:Snowflake 300um LTSEM, 13368.jpg|Micrograph of a snowflake
File:Benzene-aromatic-3D-balls.png|[[Benzene]], the simplest [[aromatic compound]] with hexagonal shape.
Image:Hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene ChemEurJ 2000 1834 commons.jpg|Crystal structure of a [[Coronene|molecular hexagon]] composed of hexagonal aromatic rings reported by Müllen and coworkers in Chem. Eur. J., 2000, 1834-1839.
Image:Giants causeway closeup.jpg|Naturally formed [[basalt]] columns from [[Giant's Causeway]] in [[Northern Ireland]]; large masses must cool slowly to form a polygonal fracture pattern
Image:Fort-Jefferson Dry-Tortugas.jpg|An aerial view of Fort Jefferson in [[Dry Tortugas National Park]]
Image:Jwst front view.jpg|The [[James Webb Space Telescope]] mirror is composed of 18 hexagonal segments.
File:564X573-Carte France geo verte.png|[[Metropolitan France]] has a vaguely hexagonal shape. In French, ''l'Hexagone'' refers to the European mainland of France aka the "metropole" as opposed to the overseas territories such as [[Guadeloupe]], [[Martinique]] or [[French Guiana]].
Image:Hanksite.JPG|Hexagonal [[Hanksite]] crystal, one of many [[hexagonal crystal system]] minerals
File:HexagonalBarnKewauneeCountyWisconsinWIS42.jpg|Hexagonal barn
Image:Reading the Hexagon Theatre.jpg|[[The Hexagon]], a hexagonal [[theatre]] in [[Reading, Berkshire]]
Image:Hexaschach.jpg|[[Władysław Gliński]]'s [[hexagonal chess]]
Image:Chinese pavilion.jpg|Asian pavilion.jpg
</gallery>
 
==See also==
*[[24-cell]]: a [[four-dimensional space|four-dimensional]] figure which, like the hexagon, has [[orthoplex]] facets and is [[self-dual]]
*[[Hexagonal crystal system]]
*[[Hexagonal number]]
*[[Hexagonal tiling]]: a [[regular tiling]] of hexagons in a plane
*[[Hexagram]]: 6-sided star within a regular hexagon
*[[Unicursal hexagram]]: single path, 6-sided star, within a hexagon
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
==External links==
*{{MathWorld|title=Hexagon|urlname=Hexagon}}
*[http://www.mathopenref.com/hexagon.html Definition and properties of a hexagon] with interactive animation and [http://www.mathopenref.com/consthexagon.html construction with compass and straightedge].
*[http://www.janmeinema.com/cymatics/gallery/gallery_009.html Cymatics – Hexagonal shapes occurring within water sound images]{{Dead link|date=May 2010}}
*[http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/media/cassini-20070327.html Cassini Images Bizarre Hexagon on Saturn]
*[http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/multimedia/pia09188.html Saturn's Strange Hexagon]
*[http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=1988Icar...76..335G&db_key=AST&data_type=HTML&format= A hexagonal feature around Saturn's North Pole]
*[http://space.com/scienceastronomy/070327_saturn_hex.html "Bizarre Hexagon Spotted on Saturn"] – from [[Space.com]] (27 March 2007)
* [http://supfam.org/supraHex supraHex] A supra-hexagonal map for analysing high-dimensional omics data.
 
{{Polygons}}
 
[[Category:Polygons]]
[[Category:Elementary shapes]]

Revision as of 07:31, 8 February 2014

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