Soma cube
The Soma cube is a mathematical puzzle by Piet Hein.
- This text is from the 'Tetromino' article, and is being edited
Counting rotations in two dimensions as equivalent, there are seven possible shapes:
- I (also called "stick", "straight"): four blocks in a straight line
- Square (also called "O", "package", "block"): four blocks in a 2x2 square
- T: a row of three blocks with one added below the center
A common move with the T piece is to spin it in place to fill a line. - L: a row of three blocks with one added below the left side
- J (also called "inverted L", "Gamma"): a row of three blocks with one added below the right side
This piece is a reflection of L but cannot be rotated into L in two dimensions; this is an example of chirality. However, in three dimensions, this piece is identical to L.) - S: bent trimino with block placed on outside of clockwise side
- Z: bent trimino with block added on outside of anticlockwise side
Reflection to S. See "J", above.
When added the third dimension, there are three more patterns, all created by placing a unit cube on the bent trimino:
- Left screw: unit cube placed on top of anticlockwise side. Chiral in 3D.
- Right screw: unit cube placed on top of clockwise side. Chiral in 3D.
- Branch: unit cube placed on bend. Not chiral in 3D.
See also: