Gyrobifastigium
In geometry, the gyrobifastigium is a polyhedron that is constructed by attaching a triangular prism to square face of another one. It is an example of a Johnson solid. It is the only Johnson solid that can tile three-dimensional space. Construction and its naming The gyrobifastigium can be constructed by attaching two triangular prisms along corresponding square faces, giving a quarter-turn to one prism. These prisms cover the square faces so the resulting polyhedron has four equilateral triangles and four squares, making eight faces in total, an octahedron. Because its faces are all regular polygons and it is convex, the gyrobifastigium is a Johnson solid, indexed as J_ . The name of the gyrobifastigium comes from the Latin ''fastigium'', meaning a sloping roof. In the standard naming convention of the Johnson solids, ''bi-'' means two solids connected at their bases, and ''gyro-'' means the two halves are twisted with respect to each other. Cartesian coordinates for the ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Elongated Gyrobifastigium
In geometry, the elongated gyrobifastigium or gabled rhombohedron is a space-filling octahedron with 4 rectangles and 4 right-angled pentagonal faces. Name The first name is from the regular-faced gyrobifastigium but Elongation (geometry), elongated with 4 triangles expanded into pentagons. The name of the gyrobifastigium comes from the Latin ''fastigium'', meaning a sloping roof. In the standard naming convention of the Johnson solids, ''bi-'' means two solids connected at their bases, and ''gyro-'' means the two halves are twisted with respect to each other. The gyrobifastigium is first in a series of gyrobicupola, so this solid can also be called an ''elongated digonal gyrobicupola''. Geometrically it can also be constructed as the dual of a digonal gyrobianticupola. This construction is space-filling. The second name, ''gabled rhombohedron'', is from Michael Goldberg's paper on space-filling octahedra, model 8-VI, the 6th of at least 49 space-filling octahedra. A gable is th ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Gyrated Triangular Prismatic Honeycomb
The triangular prismatic honeycomb or triangular prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed entirely of triangular prisms. It is constructed from a triangular tiling extruded into prisms. It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs. It consists of 1 + 6 + 1 = 8 edges meeting at a vertex, There are 6 triangular prism cells meeting at an edge and faces are shared between 2 cells. Related honeycombs Hexagonal prismatic honeycomb The hexagonal prismatic honeycomb or hexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space made up of hexagonal prisms. It is constructed from a hexagonal tiling extruded into prisms. It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs. This honeycomb can be alternated into the gyrated tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb, with pairs of tetrahedra existing in the alternated gaps (instead of a triangular bipyramid). There are 1 + 3 + 1 = 5 edges meet ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Triangular Prism
In geometry, a triangular prism or trigonal prism is a Prism (geometry), prism with 2 triangular bases. If the edges pair with each triangle's vertex and if they are perpendicular to the base, it is a ''right triangular prism''. A right triangular prism may be both Semiregular polyhedron, semiregular and Uniform polyhedron, uniform. The triangular prism can be used in constructing another polyhedron. Examples are some of the Johnson solids, the truncated right triangular prism, and Schönhardt polyhedron. Properties A triangular prism has 6 vertices, 9 edges, and 5 faces. Every prism has 2 congruent faces known as its ''bases'', and the bases of a triangular prism are triangles. The triangle has 3 vertices, each of which pairs with another triangle's vertex, making up another 3 edges. These edges form 3 parallelograms as other faces. If the prism's edges are perpendicular to the base, the lateral faces are rectangles, and the prism is called a ''right triangular prism''. This ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Gyroelongated Pentagonal Rotunda
In geometry, the gyroelongated pentagonal rotunda is one of the Johnson solids (''J''25). As the name suggests, it can be constructed by gyroelongating a pentagonal rotunda (''J''6) by attaching a decagonal antiprism to its base. It can also be seen as a gyroelongated pentagonal birotunda (''J''48) with one pentagonal rotunda removed. Area and Volume With edge length a, the surface area is :A=\frac\left( 15\sqrt+\left(5+3\sqrt\right)\sqrt\right)a^2\approx31.007454303...a^2, and the volume is :V=\left(\frac+\frac\sqrt + \frac\sqrt\right) a^3\approx13.667050844...a^3. Dual polyhedron The dual of the gyroelongated pentagonal rotunda has 30 faces: 10 pentagons, 10 rhombi, and 10 quadrilaterals. External links * {{Johnson solids navigator Johnson solids ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Space-filling Polyhedron
In geometry, a space-filling polyhedron is a polyhedron that can be used to fill all of three-dimensional space via translations, rotations and/or reflections, where ''filling'' means that; taken together, all the instances of the polyhedron constitute a partition of three-space. Any periodic tiling or honeycomb of three-space can in fact be generated by translating a primitive cell polyhedron. If a polygon can tile the plane, its prism is space-filling; examples include the cube, triangular prism, and the hexagonal prism. Any parallelepiped tessellates Euclidean 3-space, as do the five parallelohedra including the cube, hexagonal prism, truncated octahedron, and rhombic dodecahedron. Other space-filling polyhedra include the pyramid, plesiohedra and stereohedra, polyhedra whose tilings have symmetries taking every tile to every other tile, including the gyrobifastigium, the triakis truncated tetrahedron, and the trapezo-rhombic dodecahedron. The cube is the ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Triangular Orthobicupola
In geometry, the triangular orthobicupola is one of the Johnson solids (). As the name suggests, it can be constructed by attaching two triangular cupolas () along their bases. It has an equal number of squares and triangles at each vertex; however, it is not vertex-transitive. It is also called an ''anticuboctahedron'', ''twisted cuboctahedron'' or ''disheptahedron''. It is also a canonical polyhedron. The ''triangular orthobicupola'' is the first in an infinite set of orthobicupolae. Construction The ''triangular orthobicupola'' can be constructed by attaching two triangular cupolas onto their bases. Similar to the cuboctahedron, which would be known as the ''triangular gyrobicupola'', the difference is that the two triangular cupolas that make up the triangular orthobicupola are joined so that pairs of matching sides abut (hence, "ortho"); the cuboctahedron is joined so that triangles abut squares and vice versa. Given a triangular orthobicupola, a 60-degree rotation ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Hexagonal Prism
In geometry, the hexagonal prism is a Prism (geometry), prism with hexagonal base. Prisms are polyhedrons; this polyhedron has 8 face (geometry), faces, 18 Edge (geometry), edges, and 12 vertex (geometry), vertices.. As a semiregular polyhedron If faces are all regular, the hexagonal prism is a semiregular polyhedron—more generally, a uniform polyhedron—and the fourth in an infinite set of prisms formed by square sides and two regular polygon caps. It can be seen as a truncation (geometry), truncated hosohedron, hexagonal hosohedron, represented by Schläfli symbol t. Alternately it can be seen as the Cartesian product of a regular hexagon and a line segment, and represented by the product ×. The dual polyhedron, dual of a hexagonal prism is a hexagonal bipyramid. The symmetry group of a right hexagonal prism is prismatic symmetry D_ of order 24, consisting of rotation around an axis passing through the regular hexagon bases' center, and reflection across a hori ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Truncated Octahedron
In geometry, the truncated octahedron is the Archimedean solid that arises from a regular octahedron by removing six pyramids, one at each of the octahedron's vertices. The truncated octahedron has 14 faces (8 regular hexagon, hexagons and 6 Square (geometry), squares), 36 edges, and 24 vertices. Since each of its faces has point symmetry the truncated octahedron is a 6-zonohedron. It is also the Goldberg polyhedron GIV(1,1), containing square and hexagonal faces. Like the cube, it can tessellate (or "pack") 3-dimensional space, as a permutohedron. The truncated octahedron was called the "mecon" by Buckminster Fuller. Its dual polyhedron is the tetrakis hexahedron. If the original truncated octahedron has unit edge length, its dual tetrakis hexahedron has edge lengths and . Classifications As an Archimedean solid A truncated octahedron is constructed from a regular octahedron by cutting off all vertices. This resulting polyhedron has six squares and eight hexagons, leaving ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Cube
A cube or regular hexahedron is a three-dimensional space, three-dimensional solid object in geometry, which is bounded by six congruent square (geometry), square faces, a type of polyhedron. It has twelve congruent edges and eight vertices. It is a type of parallelepiped, with pairs of parallel opposite faces, and more specifically a rhombohedron, with congruent edges, and a rectangular cuboid, with right angles between pairs of intersecting faces and pairs of intersecting edges. It is an example of many classes of polyhedra: Platonic solid, regular polyhedron, parallelohedron, zonohedron, and plesiohedron. The dual polyhedron of a cube is the regular octahedron. The cube can be represented in many ways, one of which is the graph known as the cubical graph. It can be constructed by using the Cartesian product of graphs. The cube is the three-dimensional hypercube, a family of polytopes also including the two-dimensional square and four-dimensional tesseract. A cube with 1, unit s ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Surface Area
The surface area (symbol ''A'') of a solid object is a measure of the total area that the surface of the object occupies. The mathematical definition of surface area in the presence of curved surfaces is considerably more involved than the definition of arc length of one-dimensional curves, or of the surface area for polyhedra (i.e., objects with flat polygonal faces), for which the surface area is the sum of the areas of its faces. Smooth surfaces, such as a sphere, are assigned surface area using their representation as parametric surfaces. This definition of surface area is based on methods of infinitesimal calculus and involves partial derivatives and double integration. A general definition of surface area was sought by Henri Lebesgue and Hermann Minkowski at the turn of the twentieth century. Their work led to the development of geometric measure theory, which studies various notions of surface area for irregular objects of any dimension. An important example is ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
John Wiley & Sons
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., commonly known as Wiley (), is an American Multinational corporation, multinational Publishing, publishing company that focuses on academic publishing and instructional materials. The company was founded in 1807 and produces books, Academic journal, journals, and encyclopedias, in print and electronically, as well as online products and services, training materials, and educational materials for undergraduate, graduate, and continuing education students. History The company was established in 1807 when Charles Wiley opened a print shop in Manhattan. The company was the publisher of 19th century American literary figures like James Fenimore Cooper, Washington Irving, Herman Melville, and Edgar Allan Poe, as well as of legal, religious, and other non-fiction titles. The firm took its current name in 1865. Wiley later shifted its focus to scientific, Technology, technical, and engineering subject areas, abandoning its literary interests. Wiley's son Joh ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
|
Einstein Problem
In plane discrete geometry, the einstein problem asks about the existence of a single prototile that by itself forms an aperiodic set of prototiles; that is, a shape that can tessellate space but only in a nonperiodic way. Such a shape is called an einstein, a word play on ''ein Stein'', German for "one stone". Several variants of the problem, depending on the particular definitions of nonperiodicity and the specifications of what sets may qualify as tiles and what types of matching rules are permitted, were solved beginning in the 1990s. The strictest version of the problem was solved in 2023, after an initial discovery in 2022. The einstein problem can be seen as a natural extension of the second part of Hilbert's eighteenth problem, which asks for a single polyhedron that tiles Euclidean 3-space, but such that no tessellation by this polyhedron is isohedral. Such anisohedral tiles were found by Karl Reinhardt in 1928, but these anisohedral tiles all tile space periodi ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |