In a breakthrough announced in October 2025, mathematicians Jakob Steininger and Sergey Yurkevich discovered the first shape proven to lack the “Rupert property” - meaning it cannot have a straight tunnel bored through it large enough for an identical copy to pass through[1].
Named the “Noperthedron,” this 90-vertex, 152-face shape disproved a centuries-old conjecture that all convex polyhedra would have this pass-through property, first demonstrated by Prince Rupert with a cube in the 1600s[1:1].
The proof combined theoretical advances with massive computer calculations, examining approximately 18 million possible orientations. “It’s a miracle that it works,” said Steininger, who developed the proof with Yurkevich while both worked in Austria[1:2].
This resolved a geometry problem dating back to Prince Rupert’s royal bet that one cube couldn’t pass through another. While Rupert won that bet, and mathematicians later proved many complex shapes could have pass-through tunnels, the Noperthedron finally provided the first counterexample[1:3].



The property is (was) specific to convex polyhedrons.
Ahh I overlooked the “polyhedron” part. Thanks!