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Added GIF animation
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Ali Khezeli
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I have a simpler example and I see that its idea is similar to the above one.

Example of a polyhedron

Cut the vertices of a cube to form 8 small triangles and suppose the triangles are rigid but the faces are not. Then rotate the triangles, 4 of them clockwise and the rest counter-clockwise, in an alternating manner.

Animating the above example

The image isimages are drawn using Geogebra 3D.

I have a simpler example and I see that its idea is similar to the above one.

Example of a polyhedron

Cut the vertices of a cube to form 8 small triangles and suppose the triangles are rigid but the faces are not. Then rotate the triangles, 4 of them clockwise and the rest counter-clockwise, in an alternating manner.

The image is drawn using Geogebra 3D.

I have a simpler example and I see that its idea is similar to the above one.

Example of a polyhedron

Cut the vertices of a cube to form 8 small triangles and suppose the triangles are rigid but the faces are not. Then rotate the triangles, 4 of them clockwise and the rest counter-clockwise, in an alternating manner.

Animating the above example

The images are drawn using Geogebra 3D.

The GIF didn't work. Removed it.
Source Link
Ali Khezeli
  • 378
  • 1
  • 10

I have a simpler example and I see that its idea is similar to the above one. See it here

Example of a polyhedron

Cut the vertices of a cube to form 8 small triangles and suppose the triangles are rigid but the faces are not. Then rotate the triangles, 4 of them clockwise and the rest counter-clockwise, in an alternating manner.

The image is drawn using Geogebra 3D.

I have a simpler example and I see that its idea is similar to the above one. See it here

Cut the vertices of a cube to form 8 small triangles and suppose the triangles are rigid but the faces are not. Then rotate the triangles, 4 of them clockwise and the rest counter-clockwise, in an alternating manner.

I have a simpler example and I see that its idea is similar to the above one.

Example of a polyhedron

Cut the vertices of a cube to form 8 small triangles and suppose the triangles are rigid but the faces are not. Then rotate the triangles, 4 of them clockwise and the rest counter-clockwise, in an alternating manner.

The image is drawn using Geogebra 3D.

Source Link
Ali Khezeli
  • 378
  • 1
  • 10

I have a simpler example and I see that its idea is similar to the above one. See it here

Cut the vertices of a cube to form 8 small triangles and suppose the triangles are rigid but the faces are not. Then rotate the triangles, 4 of them clockwise and the rest counter-clockwise, in an alternating manner.