Decagram (geometry)
10-pointed star polygon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In geometry, a decagram is a 10-point star polygon. There is one regular decagram, containing the vertices of a regular decagon, but connected by every third point. Its Schläfli symbol is {10/3}.[1]
| Regular decagram | |
|---|---|
A regular decagram | |
| Type | Regular star polygon |
| Edges and vertices | 10 |
| Schläfli symbol | {10/3} t{5/3} |
| Coxeter–Dynkin diagrams | |
| Symmetry group | Dihedral (D10) |
| Internal angle (degrees) | 72° |
| Properties | star, cyclic, equilateral, isogonal, isotoxal |
| Dual polygon | self |

The name decagram combines a numeral prefix, deca-, with the Greek suffix -gram. The -gram suffix derives from γραμμῆς (grammēs) meaning a line.[2]
Regular decagram
Applications
Decagrams have been used as one of the decorative motifs in girih tiles.[3]
Isotoxal variations
An isotoxal polygon has two vertices and one edge. There are isotoxal decagram forms, which alternates vertices at two radii. Each form has a freedom of one angle. The first is a variation of a double-wound of a pentagon {5}, and last is a variation of a double-wound of a pentagram {5/2}. The middle is a variation of a regular decagram, {10/3}.
{(5/2)α} |
{(5/3)α} |
{(5/4)α} |
Related figures
A regular decagram is a 10-sided polygram, represented by symbol {10/n}, containing the same vertices as regular decagon. Only one of these polygrams, {10/3} (connecting every third point), forms a regular star polygon, but there are also three ten-vertex polygrams which can be interpreted as regular compounds:
- {10/5} is a compound of five degenerate digons 5{2}
- {10/4} is a compound of two pentagrams 2{5/2}
- {10/2} is a compound of two pentagons 2{5}.[4][5]
{10/2} can be seen as the 2D equivalent of the 3D compound of dodecahedron and icosahedron and 4D compound of 120-cell and 600-cell; that is, the compound of two pentagonal polytopes in their respective dual positions.
{10/4} can be seen as the two-dimensional equivalent of the three-dimensional compound of small stellated dodecahedron and great dodecahedron or compound of great icosahedron and great stellated dodecahedron through similar reasons. It has six four-dimensional analogues, with two of these being compounds of two self-dual star polytopes, like the pentagram itself; the compound of two great 120-cells and the compound of two grand stellated 120-cells. A full list can be seen at Polytope compound#Compounds with duals.
Deeper truncations of the regular pentagon and pentagram can produce intermediate star polygon forms with ten equally spaced vertices and two edge lengths that remain vertex-transitive (any two vertices can be transformed into each other by a symmetry of the figure).[6][7][8]