This page gives guideline for finding edge-5-colourings of the icosahedron; and for showing whether two such colourings are necessarily distinct (after rotations, reflections, and permutations of the colours) or potentially isomorphic.
We start with a set of lemmas. Each is easily proved. No proofs are offered here.
If we have an edge-5-colouring of the icosahedron, we can probably find another as follows:
The procedure above, applied repeatedly, rapidly gives rise to many edge-5-colourings. But we need a way to tell whether each one we find is different from all those we have found already – an invariant, such that two colourings with diffferent values of the invariant are provably different, despite being rotated, being reflected, and having their colours permuted.
We describe two such invariants:
The actual colours involved in these invariants are irrelevant. What matters is the list of conformations, and how many colour-pairs are associated with each; and the list of divisions into regions, and how many colours etc. The colours are listed so that the accuracy of the invariants can be checked against the accompanying coloured diagram.
A typical casting invariant is presented like this,
R | 7 |
G | 3 |
Y | 7 |
B | S |
K | 3 |
This means that the red edges are in the cast denoted by "7", the green edges in the cast denoted by "3"; etc.
This invariant distinguishes between the mirrored versions of a chiral colouring. To convert an invariant to its mirror-image version, swap 1s with 9s, 3s with 7s, and Ds with Ls.
Castings are discussed and listed here.
A typical "regions" invariant is presented like this,
RG | P |
RB | E- |
RY | N+ |
RK | O |
GB | E+ |
GY | O |
GK | N- |
BY | E- |
BK | E+ |
YK | P |
This means that for the colour pairs red-green and yellow-black, the division into regions is the one we have denoted by "P"; for red-blue and blue-yellow it is the one we have denoted by "E-"; etc.
This invariant distinguishes between the mirrored versions of a chiral colouring. To convert an invariant to its mirror-image version, swap +s with -s.
Regions are discussed and listed here.
The list of colourings refers to circuits in the diagrams it shows. These circuits are described by listing their vertices, numbered as shown to the right.