Natures Word: Musings on Sacred Geometry

The Five Platonic Solids; The Dodecahedron

The Dodecahedron at a Glance

Number of faces:
12 pentagons 
Number of edges:
30
Number of vertices:
20
Dihedral angle:
116'34"
Facial angle:
72'
Central angle:
41'49"
Elemental attribution:
Spirit
Geometric dual:
icosahedron

Visualizing the Dodecahedron

click for image creditsOriginal animation created by A. O'Connor for Nature's Word using POV-Ray, WWW Gif Animator, and Adobe Photoshop 5.0.

Basic animation

click for image creditsPhoto of ancient celtic platonic model, carved from stone, taken by Rod Bull. Taken From: Keith Critchlow's book Time Stands Still, St. Matin's Press, 1982

Ancient celtic model of the dodecahedron, carved in stone

click for image creditsOriginal artwork by Bob Smith. Used with the artist's permission.

An artist's conceptualization of the dodecahedron

click for image creditsscanned image reworked by A. O'Connor in Photoship 5.0, Taken from: Anthony Pugh's book Polyhedra; A Visual Approach

Net, or pattern, that can be used to create a dodecahedron from cardstock

Proportions within the Dodecahedron

Proportions relative to edge length (if edge length equals one)

Insphere
Interspere
Circumsphere
Surface Area
1.11351636
1.309016994
1.401258538
 
 
phi divided by 
(phi divided by 2)
 
 
 
Proportions relative to insphere (if insphere radius equals one)
 Edge Length
Intersphere
Circumsphere
Surface Area
0.89805595
1.175570505
1.258408572
 
 
 
 
 
 
Proportions relative to intersphere (if intersphere radius equals one)
 Edge Length
Insphere
Circumsphere
Surface Area
0.76393202
0.85065081
1.070466269
 
1 divided by 
(phi divided by (phi divided by 2))
 
1 divided by
(phi divided by the
square root of 3)
 
 
Proportions relative to circumsphere 
(if circumsphere radius equals one)
Edge Length
Insphere
Intersphere
Surface Area
0.71364418
0.7946654472
0.934172359
 
 
 
phi divided by the
square root of 3