A geodesic icosahedron, the Times Square New Year's eve ball

2023-12-31 00:50:07

A geodesic icosahedron, the Times Square New Year's eve ball

Image by kjpargeter on Freepik


It's a gorgeous ball, covered with Waterford Crystal triangles, shaped as a geodesic icosahedron.  Every New Year's Eve it descends in Times Square to mark the beginning of the new year.  Students can take a closer look at this construction and use our drawings to experiment with slicing an icosahedron in order to discover how this shape is formed.

You can use our short video below to demonstrate truncation.


For Adventurer members we have an editable Word docx and solutions with diagrams.


Download PDF Download Editable Files
Share this:
Comments (0)
    Display 1 - 10 Of total 0
    BP and the stock market updated
    Free Stock photos by Vecteezy The...
    Really stuffed!
    Wow, these cookies look really stuffed...
    Curiosity landed on Mars
    Keep your students up on what's happening in s...
    Pizza party figuring
      In this activity students decide how to ...
    How many times bigger?
    Listen to students initial thoughts as they wr...
    The Blue Marble
    Sunday, April 22nd, 2018, is Earth Day. Use...
    Microns and Masks
      How big is one coronavirus? How big is a m...
    It's opening weekend for Barbie
    This movie is supposed to be nostalgic, clev...
    Voyager on the edge
    The two Voyager space probes are in the news rec...
    It's latke time
       In Leslie's family it is tradition...