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    Polyhedron unfolding: Vertex unfolding, facet paths,
      generally unfolding orthogonal polyhedra, grid unfolding,
      refinement, Manhattan towers, orthostacks, orthotubes, orthotrees.  Polyhedron folding: Cauchy's Rigidity Theorem, Alexandrov's uniqueness of folding.  | 
  
  
  
  
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  This lecture continues the theme of unfolding polyhedra,
  and kicks off our coverage of folding polygons into polyhedra.
   On the unfolding side, we'll cover “vertex unfolding”, which is a variation on edge unfolding kind of like hinged dissections. We'll prove that this type of unfolding exists, even for nonconvex polyhedra, provided every face is a triangle. Then we'll cover recent breakthroughs in general unfolding, for orthogonal polyhedra. On the folding side, we'll prove Cauchy's Rigidity Theorem: convex polyhedra have exactly one convex realization (viewing faces as rigid and edges as hinges). Then we'll show how to extend this to Alexandrov's Uniqueness Theorem: if you glue up the boundary of a polygon, there's at most one convex polyhedron you can make. (Next lecture we'll see how to actually get one.)  | ||||
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   Handwritten notes, page 1/8 •
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 Handwritten notes, page 1/8 • [previous page] • [next page] • [PDF]  | 
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   Slides, page 1/26 •
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 Edge unfolding vs. general unfolding (figures drawn by Erik Demaine) Slides, page 1/26 • [previous page] • [next page] • [PDF]  |