I found an interesting set of constants while exploring the properties of nonconstant functions that are invariant under the symmetry groups of regular polyhedra in the Riemann sphere, endowed with the standard chordal metric.
The simplest functions I have found posessing these symmetries are rational functions, with zeroes at the vertices of a certain inscribed polyhedron (tetrahedron, octahedron and icosahedron) of order equal to the vertex degrees, and poles of order 3 centered at their faces (i.e. at the vertices of the dual polyhedron). Up to rotation, these functions are:
$$F_{3,3}(z) = f_{3,3} \: z^3 \frac{(z^3-2\sqrt{2})^3}{(z^3+1/(2\sqrt{2}))^3}$$
$$F_{4,3}(z) = f_{4,3} \: z^4 \frac{(z^4-1)^4}{(z^8+14z^4+1)^3}$$
$$F_{5,3}(z) = f_{5,3} \: z^5 \frac{(z^{10}-11z^5-1)^5}{(z^{20}+228z^{15}+494z^{10}-228z^5+1)^3}$$
where the $f_{a,b}$ are in principle arbitrary normalization constants. As an example, here is a color wheel graph of $F_{5,3}$ stereographically projected into the complex plane where the icosahedral symmetry is apparent:
One can follow a similar procedure in the case of dihedral symmetry, obtaining
$$F_{p,2}(z) = f_{p,2} \frac{z^p}{(z^p-1)^2}$$
However, playing with the plots in this website I noticed that there is a certain special value for the constants $f_{a,b}$, for which the subset of the image of $F$ consisting of points with unit modulus becomes connected, tesellating the sphere. These values are $$f_{3,3} = \dfrac{1}{16\sqrt{2}}, \: f_{4,3}=108, \: f_{5,3}=1728$$ and $f_{p,2}=4$ for any $p$. They seem to be universal constants in some sense: they are unique (up to phase) with that property, and $f_{p,2}$ doesn't depend on $p$. But they don't seem to follow any obvious relationship with the corresponding polyhedra.
My question is, where do these constants come from? I found them by trial and error, but it is possible to calculate or characterize them in some way?
Edit: I noticed that the last constant $f_{5,3} = 1728$ also appears in the definition of the $j$-invariant function. But I know nothing about modular form theory aside from the very basics, so I can't tell whether there's some relationship here or it's just coincidence.
