In geometry, a disdyakis dodecahedron, (also hexoctahedron,[1] hexakis octahedron, octakis cube, octakis hexahedron, kisrhombic dodecahedron[2]) or d48, is a Catalan solid with 48 faces and the dual to the Archimedean truncated cuboctahedron.
Replacing each face of the rhombic dodecahedron with a flat pyramid creates a polyhedron that looks almost like the disdyakis dodecahedron, and is topologically equivalent to it.
[3] The net of the rhombic dodecahedral pyramid also shares the same topology.
Its collective edges represent the reflection planes of the symmetry.
It can also be seen in the corner and mid-edge triangulation of the regular cube and octahedron, and rhombic dodecahedron.
The edges of a spherical disdyakis dodecahedron belong to 9 great circles.
Three of them form a spherical octahedron (gray in the images below).
The remaining six form three square hosohedra (red, green and blue in the images below).
They all correspond to mirror planes - the former in dihedral [2,2], and the latter in tetrahedral [3,3] symmetry.
The truncated cuboctahedron and its dual, the disdyakis dodecahedron can be drawn in a number of symmetric orthogonal projective orientations.
Between a polyhedron and its dual, vertices and faces are swapped in positions, and edges are perpendicular.
The disdyakis dodecahedron is one of a family of duals to the uniform polyhedra related to the cube and regular octahedron.
It is a polyhedra in a sequence defined by the face configuration V4.6.2n.
With an even number of faces at every vertex, these polyhedra and tilings can be shown by alternating two colors so all adjacent faces have different colors.
Each face on these domains also corresponds to the fundamental domain of a symmetry group with order 2,3,n mirrors at each triangle face vertex.