Loren Booda
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What, if any, examples of the regular solids, dodecahedrons and icosahedrons, exist in nature?
Loren Booda said:What, if any, examples of the regular solids, dodecahedrons and icosahedrons, exist in nature?
denni89627 said:In 2003, an apparent periodicity in the cosmic microwave background led to the suggestion, by Jean-Pierre Luminet of the Observatoire de Paris and colleagues, that the shape of the Universe is a finite dodecahedron, attached to itself by each pair of opposite faces to form a Poincaré sphere. ("Is the universe a dodecahedron?", article at PhysicsWeb.) During the following year, astronomers searched for more evidence to support this hypothesis but found none.
Found this on Wiki. sounds like idle speculation to me. Who comes up with this stuff...
hurk4 said:Some time ago I have gone trough J.P.Luminet's book "Lunivers chiffonné" and als through the book of Janna Levin "How the universe got its spots". For several reasons I don't see a possibility for a universe embedded in nothing at all (IMO "nothing" and no space never existed or will ever exist).
But I misunderstood the question and that was why I made my post. The reason why I did that is because I wanted to state that pure mathematical entities like circles and dodecahaedrons, ideally, do not exist at all in nature. What nature shows are examples of physical things whose form can aproximately be described by such mathematical forms. Mathematics is very helpful to a certain degree to explain reality, but I see that somewhere the mathematical package doesn't fit anymore, e.g. singularities in GR, or broken symmetries to take into consideration in quantumgravity?? At least then one has to adapt the mathematical package but IMO it will always be only just language and never reality. Even physics only consist of, ever to be adapted, physical models and will never be the autonomous reality itself.
Kind regards Hurk4
Loren Booda said:What, if any, examples of the regular solids, dodecahedrons and icosahedrons, exist in nature?
Well, certainly in detectable amounts they're synthetic. But fullerenes are made by processes that don't require human intervention. Sort of.Loren Booda said:grave,
Are they present in nature?
(I assume that fullerenes are all synthetic.)