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.
You can use our short video below to demonstrate truncation.
For Adventurer members we have an editable Word docx and solutions with diagrams.
Comments (0)
Display 1 - 10 Of total 0
Another year of Never Ending Pasta
On September 15, 2016, Olive Garden again of...
Wind chill
The weather forecasters tell u...
John Urschel, retired Baltimore Raven and Black mathematician
John Urschel is a young man with several seeming...
Macy’s Star Rewards Points
Wow! Check out this deal at Macy'...
Bits, bytes, and nibbles
Clicking on the image will show it larger.
...
Chuck E. Cheese needed to shred
Restaurants have been having a hard time and Chu...
Lifespan of a meme, the Harlem Shake
Five friends who skateboard and...
Inflation and the cost of gasoline
In 1980, one gallon of gasoline costs $1.22. &nb...
Really old
Tom Lehrer is a singer, songwriter,...
How much do the movie tickets cost?
Ooops!
I was supposed to buy 4 adult and 2 ch...