Rubik's Revenge
The Rubik's Revenge (also known as the Master Cube) is a 4×4×4 version of Rubik's Cube. It was released in 1981. Invented by Péter Sebestény, the Rubik's Revenge was nearly called the Sebestény Cube until a somewhat last-minute decision changed the puzzle's name to attract fans of the original Rubik's Cube.[1] Unlike the original puzzle (and the 5×5×5 cube), it has no fixed facets: the centre facets (four per face) are free to move to different positions.
Methods for solving the 3×3×3 cube work for the edges and corners of the 4×4×4 cube, as long as one has correctly identified the relative positions of the colours — since the centre facets can no longer be used for identification.
Mechanics
The puzzle consists of 56 unique miniature cubes ("cubies") on the surface. These consist of 24 centres which show one colour each, 24 edges which show two colours each, and 8 corners which show three colours each. The original Rubik's Revenge can be taken apart without much difficulty, typically by turning one side through a 30° angle and prying an edge upward until it dislodges.
The original mechanism designed by Sebestény uses a grooved ball to hold the centre pieces in place. The edge pieces are held in place by the centres and the corners are held in place by the edges, much like the original cube. There are three mutually perpendicular grooves for the centre pieces to slide through. Each groove is only wide enough to allow one row of centre pieces to slide through it. The ball is shaped to prevent the centre pieces of the other row from sliding, ensuring that the ball remains aligned with the outside of the cube. Turning one of the centre layers moves either just that layer or the ball as well.[2]
The Eastsheen version of the cube, which is slightly smaller at 6 cm to an edge, has a completely different mechanism. Its mechanism is very similar to Eastsheen's version of the Professor's cube, instead of the ball-core mechanism. There are 42 pieces (36 movable and six fixed) completely hidden within the cube, corresponding to the centre rows on the Professor's Cube. This design is more durable than the original and also allows for screws to be used to tighten or loosen the cube. The central spindle is specially shaped to prevent it from becoming misaligned with the exterior of the cube.[3]
There are 24 edge pieces which show two coloured sides each, and eight corner pieces which show three colours. Each corner piece or pair of edge pieces shows a unique colour combination, but not all combinations are present (for example, there is no piece with both red and orange sides, if red and orange are on opposite sides of the solved Cube). The location of these cubes relative to one another can be altered by twisting the layers of the cube, but the location of the coloured sides relative to one another in the completed state of the puzzle cannot be altered: it is fixed by the relative positions of the centre squares and the distribution of colour combinations on edge and corner pieces.
For most recent Cubes, the colours of the stickers are red opposite orange, yellow opposite white, and green opposite blue. However, there also exist Cubes with alternative colour arrangements (yellow opposite green, blue opposite white and red opposite orange). The Eastsheen version has purple (opposite red) instead of orange.
Permutations
There are 8 corners, 24 edges and 24 centres.
Any permutation of the corners is possible, including odd permutations. Seven of the corners can be independently rotated, and the orientation of the eighth depends on the other seven, giving 8!×37 combinations.
There are 24 centres, which can be arranged in 24! different ways. Assuming that the four centres of each colour are indistinguishable, the number of permutations is reduced to 24!/(4!6) arrangements. The reducing factor comes about because there are 4! ways to arrange the four pieces of a given colour. This is raised to the sixth power because there are six colours. An odd permutation of the corners implies an odd permutation of the centres and vice versa; however, even and odd permutations of the centres are indistinguishable due to the identical appearance of the pieces.[4] There are several ways to make the centre pieces distinguishable, which would make an odd centre permutation visible.
The 24 edges cannot be flipped, because the internal shape of the pieces is asymmetrical. Corresponding edges are distinguishable, since they are mirror images of each other. Any permutation of the edges is possible, including odd permutations, giving 24! arrangements, independently of the corners or centres.
Assuming the cube does not have a fixed orientation in space, and that the permutations resulting from rotating the cube without twisting it are considered identical, the number of permutations is reduced by a factor of 24. This is because all 24 possible positions and orientations of the first corner are equivalent because of the lack of fixed centres. This factor does not appear when calculating the permutations of N×N×N cubes where N is odd, since those puzzles have fixed centres which identify the cube's spatial orientation.
This gives a total number of permutations of
The full number is 401196841564901869874093974498574336000000000 possible permutations 7[5] (about septillion or 7.4 septilliard on the 7401long scale or 7.4 quattuordecillion on the short scale).
Some versions of Rubik's Revenge have one of the centre pieces marked with a logo, distinguishing it from the other three of the same colour. This increases the number of distinguishable permutations by a factor of four to 2.96×1046, although any of the four possible positions for this piece could be regarded as correct.
Solutions
There are several methods that can be used to solve a Rubik's Revenge. The most common method is reduction, so called because it effectively reduces the 4×4×4 to a 3×3×3. Cubers first group the centre pieces of common colours together, then pair edges that show the same two colours. Once this is done, turning only the outer layers of the cube allows it to be solved like a 3×3×3 cube. However, certain positions that cannot be solved on a standard 3×3×3 cube may be reached. There are two possible problems not found on the 3×3×3. The first is two edge pieces reversed on one edge, resulting in the colours for that edge not matching the rest of the cubies on either face:
Notice that these two edge pieces are swapped. The second is two edge pairs being swapped with each other:
These situations are known as parity errors. These positions are still solvable; however, special algorithms must be applied to fix the errors.[6]
Some methods are designed to avoid the parity errors described above. For instance, solving the corners and edges first and the centres last would avoid such parity errors. Once the rest of the cube is solved, any permutation of the centre pieces can be solved. Note that it is possible to apparently exchange a pair of face centres by cycling 3 face centres, two of which are visually identical.
Direct solving of a 4×4×4 is uncommon, but possible, with methods such as K4. Doing so mixes a variety of techniques and is heavily reliant on commutators for the final steps.[7]
Some algorithms of Rubik's revenge are:
1.Fixing edges- (r U' R U r' R') or,( l' U L' U' l L)
2.Parity of edges- r' 2U l 2F l' 2F 2r 2U r 2U r' 2U 2F 2r 2F
3.Parity of corners- 2u 2r 2U 2r 2R 2U 2r 2u
World records
The world record single fastest time is 21.54 seconds set by Feliks Zemdegs of Australia at China Championship 2015.[8] The world record for an average of five solves is held by Sebastian Weyer with a time of 26.03 seconds set at the German Nationals 2014.[9] Oliver Frost of the United Kingdom holds the world record for solving the 4x4x4 cube blindfolded in 2 minutes, 2.75 seconds, set at Irish Championship 2015.[10]
Top 10 Solves
- Feliks Zemdegs 21.54s at China Championship 2015
- Sebastian Weyer 21.97s at Euro 2014
- Feliks Zemdegs 23.72s at Canberra Autumn 2015
- Bill Wang 25.10s at Battle of Waterloo 2014
- Seung Hyuk Nahm 25.58 at Good Cube Show Korea 2015
- Kevin Costello III 26.09s at GCC Fall 2014
- Xuming Wang 26.21s at Wenzhou Open 2015
- Dario Roa Sanchez 26.38s at Castellon Open 2015
- Yi-Fan Wu 26.43s at Magic Revenge 2015
- Mats Valk 26.47 at 1 AVG 2013
In popular culture
In Cube Wars, an episode from the animated series, Whatever Happened to Robot Jones?, the students play a colored cube called the Wonder Cube which is similar to the Rubik's Revenge.[11]
See also
- Pocket Cube (2×2×2)
- Rubik's Cube (3×3×3)
- Professor's Cube (5×5×5)
- V-Cube 6 (6×6×6)
- V-Cube 7 (7×7×7)
- Combination puzzles
References
- ↑ "Rubik's Cube How to Play". DMFB&C. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
- ↑ United States Patent 4421311
- ↑ United States Patent 5992850
- ↑ Cubic Circular Issue 7 & 8 David Singmaster, 1985
- ↑ Cubic Circular Issues 3 & 4 David Singmaster, 1982
- ↑ Morris, Frank. "solving the revenge". Retrieved 15 June 2012.
- ↑ Barlow, Thom. "K4 Method". Retrieved 15 June 2012.
- ↑ World Cube Association Official Results - Euro 2014
- ↑ World Cube Association Official Results - German Nationals 2014.
- ↑ World Cube Association Official Results - Irish Championship 2015.
- ↑ "Cube Wars". Big Cartoon DataBase. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
Further reading
- Rubik's Revenge: The Simplest Solution by William L. Mason
- Speedsolving the Cube by Dan Harris, 'Rubik's Revenge' pages 100-120.
- The Winning Solution to Rubik's Revenge by Minh Thai, with Herbert Taylor and M. Razid Black.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rubik's Revenge. |
- Beginner/Intermediate solution to the Rubik's Revenge by Chris Hardwick
- 'K4' Method Advanced direct solving method.
- Patterns A collection of pretty patterns for Rubik's Revenge
- Program Rubik's Cube 3D Unlimited size