Hasty Briefsbeta

  • #polyhedron
  • #Rupert’s property
  • #geometry
  • A hole can be cut in a cube large enough to slide an identical cube through it, known as Rupert’s property.
  • Steininger and Yurkevich proved the existence of a convex polyhedron (90 vertices, 240 edges, 152 faces) that lacks Rupert’s property, named 'noperthedron'.
  • The proof involved a computer search of 18 million different holes and additional mathematical verification.
  • Prince Rupert’s cube is named after Prince Rupert of the Rhine, who first posed the problem of passing a cube through another cube of the same size.
  • John Wallis provided a positive answer, and Pieter Nieuwland later found the largest possible cube that can pass through a unit cube.
  • Greg Egan and David Renshaw demonstrated Rupert’s property for various polyhedra, including the cube and regular octahedron.
  • The triakis tetrahedron narrowly has Rupert’s property.