Parameterized rigid cube
This activity belongs to the GeoGebra book Linkages.
Since the prism we have seen was not rigid, let's expand the constraints. Now we place bars of length square root of 2 on each of the faces of the cube, forming a tetrahedron, as shown in the following construction. With this, we get that the number of internal degrees of the cube is 0.
Now, does the rigidity of the cube under these conditions imply that there is only ONE configuration (barring congruences)? That is, is the cube globally rigid?
The answer is NO: the cube positions of the vertices can be parameterized like this:
- O = (0, 0, 0)
- U = (0, 1, 0)
- E = (2e - 1, 0, 0)
- A = (0, 0, 1 - 2a)
- J = ((2e - 1) (3 - 4j), 3 - 4j, (1 - 2a) (3 - 4j)) / 3
- F = ((2e - 1) (3 - 2f) (3 - 2j), (3 - 2f) (3 - 2j), (1 - 2a) (6f + 4f j - 6j)) / 9
- B = ((2e - 1) (6b + 4b j - 6j), (3 - 2b) (3 - 2j), (1 - 2a) (3 - 2b) (3 - 2j)) / 9
- D = ((2e - 1) (3 - 2d) (3 - 2j), 6d + 4d j - 6j, (1 - 2a) (3 - 2d) (3 - 2j)) / 9
Note that the e parameter changes the sign of the X component of each point, and the a parameter changes the sign of the Z component. But some points have that null coordinate, so they are not affected by this reflection. It is for this reason that some points take fewer possible positions than others:
- E=(2e-1, 0, 0) depends on e. Therefore it has 2 positions: (±1, 0, 0)
- A=(0, 0, 1-2a) depends on a. Therefore it has 2 positions: (0, 0, ±1)
- J=((2e-1)(3-4j), 3-4j, (1-2a)(3-4j))/3 depends on e, a and j. Therefore it has 8 positions: (±1, 1, ±1) and (±1, -1, ±1)/3
- F=((2e-1)(3-2f)(3-2j), (3-2f)(3-2j), (1-2a)(6f+4fj-6j))/9 depends on e, a, j and f. But its Z coordinate vanishes when f=j=0, so it doesn't change when the state of a changes. Therefore it has 10 positions: (±1, 1, 0), (±1, 1, ±2)/3 and (±1.1, ±4)/9. Geometrically, this happens because one of the basic positions of F lies on the XY plane, so it is symmetry invariant with respect to that plane.
- B=((2e-1)(6b+4bj-6j), (3-2b)(3-2j), (1-2a)(3-2b)(3-2j))/9 depends on e, a, j and b. But its X coordinate vanishes when b=j=0, so it doesn't change when the state of "e" changes. Therefore it has 10 positions: (0, 1, ±1), (±2, 1, ±1)/3 and (±4.1, ±1)/9. Geometrically, this happens because one of the basic positions of B lies on the YZ plane, so it is symmetry invariant with respect to that plane.
- D=((2e-1)(3-2d)(3-2j), 6d+4dj-6j, (1-2a)(3-2d)(3-2j))/9 depends on e, a, j and d. Therefore D does reach the 16 positions: (±1, 0, ±1), (±1, ±2, ±1)/3 and (±1, 4, ±1)/9
- s=0 (unit cube of six square faces, 4*1 congruent positions)
- s=1 (a vertex is reflected in a face of the tetrahedron, passing inside the unit cube, 4*4 congruent positions)
- s=2 (two vertices pass into the unit cube, 4*6 congruent positions)
- s=3 (three vertices pass into the unit cube, 4*4 congruent positions)
- s=4 (four vertices pass into the unit cube, 4*1 congruent positions)
- e=j=1, a=f=b=d=0
- e=f=1, a=j=b=d=0
Author of the construction of GeoGebra: Rafael Losada