A point is one dimensional. A line (the side of a plane) is two dimensional. A cube is three dimensional. A "hypercube" is four dimensional.
The shadow of a line (seen from above one end) is a one-dimensional point. The shadow of a cube (seen from above one side) is a two-dimensional plane. So, too, the shadow of a hypercube is three dimensional.
If one were to turn it around in three dimensions, a cube can cast two-dimensional shadows of different shapes. For example, the shadow of a cube seen from above the midpoint of one of its faces is a square. The shadow of a cube seen from above one of its corners is a hexagon. Etc.
So, too, as one rotates and reorients a hypercube in four dimensions, it casts three dimensional shadows of different shapes. It is by the shapes of these shadows alone that we can rightly describe the movements of the hypercube.
Just as there are certain angles from which a cube can be viewed that cast regular shaped shadows — the hexagon, the square, etc. — so also are there certain angles and positions at which the hypercube will cast regular shaped three dimensional shadows.
One of these is, of course, the cube itself. The angle at which the hypercube casts a cubic shadow I call "standard position."
A hypercube also casts a regular solid shape at "nested position," and the shape it casts then is a cube-within-a-cube. This is shape is the one most commonly associated with the hypercube.
Here is a picture of the hypercube at "nested position" :
Another position at which the hypercube casts a regular shadow is what I call the "conjoined position." The shadow it casts at this position is a shape geometres know as a "tesseract." The word tesseract is another name for the hypercube.
Here is a picture of the "conjoined" hypercube's shadow, the tesseract:
The last position at which the hypercube casts a regular shaped shadow which we will be dealing with here is called "antipode" position. Like the cube-within-a-cube and the tesseract, the hypercube at antipode also consists of two cubes.
The "nested" cube-within-a-cube shows one cube within the other, a view as above one of the faces of the hypercube. The "conjoined" tesseract shows one cube off-set from the other (by diaganols) and this is the view from above one of the hypercube's corners. The "antipode" position is a view from above one of the hypercube's edges.
Here is a picture of the "antipode" position of the hypercube:
Remember, all of these regular solid shapes are only different shadows cast by the same hypercube. The only difference is that the hypercube is being seen from different angles.
Just as a cube casts different shaped two dimensional shadows as it is rotated in three dimensional space, so, too, does the hypercube cast different shaped three dimensional shadows as it rotates in four-space. The rotation of a hypercube differs from the rotation of a cube, however. Because a hypercube is comprised of two cubes, each with the same volume, its rotation moves one of these cubes through the other.
Here is a picture showing a few stages of this process:
It should be remembered, however, that, just as the cube can be rotated around three axes of 3-space, so does the hypercube rotate through itself along a 4-d axis. This means that, while the simple rotation depicted above is occuring between two cubes on opposite sides, the same rotation is actually occuring for the hypercube through 6 cubes, 3 opposite 3.
Here is a computer rendering of the rotation of the hypercube:
Here is a depiction of a "slice" of a hypercube taken from one corner to the opposite corner:
Notice that the corner of the hypercube is a tetrahedron, that 1/4 through the hypercube is an octahedron, and that 3/4 through the hypercube is a zonehedral.
There are applications of the hypercube in many fields of study. Consider the following lattice which explains a complex series of relationships in quantum mechanics:
Also, ancient Hebrew mystics, when looking for an alternative to the tetractys of Pythagoras, stumbled upon the hypercube at antipode position for their "tree of life" diagram. Here, we see that each corner, or node, of the tree describes an attribute of YHVH, and that the twenty-two "paths" connecting these "sefirot" emanations are assigned to the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alef-bet. This arrangement is called the Gra.
The tree of life diagram may be better recognised by its later depiction, rendered by the Safed school of Ha QBLH, known as the Ari arrangement.
When an ordinary 3-cube is unfolded, it forms a cross of six unit squares:
So it has been reckoned that when the hypercube is unfolded, it forms a cross of eight unit cubes. Here, we see that the central cube is surrounded by six cubes, one for each side, plus a subtended eighth cube.
Here is a depiction of this type of hypercross by Salvador Dalí:
However, this type of hypercross is comprised of eight unit cubes, while the flat cross formed by the unfolded 3-cube is only comprised of six unit squares.
Another tye of hypercross can be formed without the subtended eighth cube. Like the unfolded 3-cube, it has six cube sides around each side. Here is a picture of it:
This type of hypercross should not be misunderstood as lacking the eighth subtended cube, however. The eighth cube is simply hidden within this form of the hypercross, between the six surrounding cubes and the central seventh. It is what is known as an "impossible" cube.
Here is a picture of the "impossible" cube in the hypercross:
This type of impossible cube was discovered, along with a similar impossible triangle, in the 20th century by mathematician Roger Penrose. Such impossible shapes were then incorporated into the architectures depicted by Dutch artist Maurit Cornelius Escher:
This type of cube is called "impossible" because it cannot exist in three space, although it can be depicted two dimensionally. Here is a wooden scultpure of the impossible cube. It is comprised of two separate sculptures, one above and one below, and then photographed at an angle which allows them to appear as if they were a single cohesive whole.
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