Effects of Roto-Inversion

Only a small number of roto-inversion axes are needed. Many of them actually reduce to other symmetry elements. Remember, roto-inversion consists of a rotation, followed by inverting through a point. The effects on coordinates are shown for each one below.

Two-fold roto-inversion

For cartesian axes: $$(x, y, z) \rightarrow (-x, -y, z) \rightarrow (x, y, -z)$$

This is identical to a mirror plane.

Three-fold roto-inversion

For hexagonal axes: $$(x, y, z) \rightarrow (-y, x-y, z) \rightarrow (y, y-x, -z)$$

While the rotation and inversion is supposed to be applied in one step, three-fold roto-inversions are actually identical to the separate presence of a three-fold rotation and an inversion centre (\(\bar{1}\)).

Four-fold roto-inversion

For cartesian axes:

$$(x, y, z) \rightarrow (-y, x, z) \rightarrow (y, -x, -z)$$

Four-fold roto-inversions are a new symmetry element.

Six-fold roto-inversion

For hexagonal axes:

$$(x, y, z) \rightarrow (-y, x-y, z) \rightarrow (y, y-x, -z)$$

Six-fold roto-inversions are actually equivalent to the separate application of a three-fold rotation and a perpendicular mirror plane (\(\frac{3}{m}\)). The space group \(P\frac{3}{m}\) is not listed in The International Tables as it is isomorphic with \(P\bar{6}\)!