2023-12-31 00:50:07
A geodesic icosahedron, the Times Square New Year's eve ball
A geodesic icosahedron, the Times Square New Year's eve ball
Image by kjpargeter on Freepik
It's a gorgeous ball, covered with Waterford Crystal triangles, shaped as a geodesic icosahedron. Every New Year's Eve it descends in Times Square to mark the beginning of the new year. Students can take a closer look at this construction and use our drawings to experiment with slicing an icosahedron in order to discover how this shape is formed.
For Adventurer members, we have an editable Word docx and solutions with diagrams.
Comments (0)
Display 1 - 10 Of total 0
President's Pay for Presidents' Day
You can't run for President now...
Just some March Madness math
Today, March 12th, is selection Sunday. Tomorrow...
Super Bowl cheesy pretzel poppers
Recipe courtesy of The Slow Roas...
May 27th launch from the U.S. again
May 27 scrubbed because of weather.
Successfu...
How many wings did the Bills send the Bengals?
Cincinnati Bengals serving their thank-y...
Leicester City Foxes - from underdogs to Champions
Recently, to the surprise and elation of England...
Happy Friday the 13th!
Don't worry, 13 is a Happy number! Students...
Kilauea's lava flow
[caption id="attachment_15749" align="aligncenter"...
The greatest amount of chocolate
In this updated activity, students compare t...
Which is the best deal?
How do you calculate and justify which dea...