A
Penrose tiling is a non-periodic
tiling generated by an
aperiodic set of
prototiles. Penrose tilings are named after mathematician and physicist
Roger Penrose, who investigated these sets in the 1970s. The aperiodicity of the Penrose prototiles implies that a shifted copy of a Penrose tiling will never match the original. A Penrose tiling may be constructed so as to exhibit both
reflection symmetry and fivefold
rotational symmetry, as in the diagram at the right.
A Penrose tiling has many remarkable properties, most notably:
- It is non-periodic, which means that it lacks any translational symmetry.
- It is self-similar, so the same patterns occur at larger and larger scales. Thus, the tiling can be obtained through "inflation" (or "deflation") and any finite patch from the tiling occurs infinitely many times.
- It is a quasicrystal: implemented as a physical structure a Penrose tiling will produce Bragg diffraction and its diffractogram reveals both the fivefold symmetry and the underlying long range order.
Various methods to construct Penrose tilings have been discovered, including matching rules,
substitutions or
subdivision rules, cut and project schemes and coverings.