Folding Polyiamonds into Octahedra
Abstract
We study polyiamonds (polygons arising from the triangular grid) that fold into the smallest yet unstudied platonic solid -- the octahedron. We show a number of results. Firstly, we characterize foldable polyiamonds containing a hole of positive area, namely each but one polyiamond is foldable. Secondly, we show that a convex polyiamond folds into the octahedron if and only if it contains one of five polyiamonds. We thirdly present a sharp size bound: While there exist unfoldable polyiamonds of size 14, every polyiamond of size at least 15 folds into the octahedron. This clearly implies that one can test in polynomial time whether a given polyiamond folds into the octahedron. Lastly, we show that for any assignment of positive integers to the faces, there exist a polyiamond that folds into the octahedron such that the number of triangles covering a face is equal to the assigned number.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2207.13989,
title = {Folding Polyiamonds into Octahedra},
author = {Eva Stehr and Linda Kleist},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2207.13989},
year = {2022}
}