The following rather squashed and bullet-riddled lowercase lambda:
...can be wrapped onto the surface of a cube in a way that perfectly covers the entire cube, with no gaps and no overlaps.
How can this be done?
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Sign up to join this communityThe following rather squashed and bullet-riddled lowercase lambda:
...can be wrapped onto the surface of a cube in a way that perfectly covers the entire cube, with no gaps and no overlaps.
How can this be done?
Here is the cube I made:
There are $246$ squares in the cube surface.
That gives $41$ squares per face.
So the side length is $\sqrt{41}$.
This is the hypotenuse of the right triangle $4 \times 5$
and shows how the paper must be slanted.
The cube was made 'on the fly' folding as needed.
These cubes are getting harder to solve and construct.
There are some small 'ears' that I can't easily fold and join by hand.
Update:
This shows how the paper should be folded. You can see that the folds slightly miss some of the grid points, leaving several tiny ears that need to be folded into a corresponding hollow.
My first fold was found by noticing that the two blocks (top and bottom) each has a $4 \times 5$ right triangle with the hypotenuse joining an internal angle and an external angle, so there were my first two edges. The rest followed from there.
I also showed graphically how the area of each face is $41$ with four blue $4 \times 5$ right triangles. Each has an area of $10$ and there is a $1$ unit hole in the middle.