Polyhedron From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search "Polyhedra" redirects here. For the relational database system, see Polyhedra DBMS. For the game magazine, see Polyhedron (magazine). For the scientific journal, see Polyhedron (journal). Some Polyhedra
Dodecahedron
(Regular polyhedron)
Small stellated dodecahedron
(Regular star)
Icosidodecahedron
(Uniform/Quasiregular)
Great cubicuboctahedron
(Uniform star)
Rhombic triacontahedron
(Uniform/Quasiregular dual)
Elongated pentagonal cupola
(Convex regular-faced)
Octagonal prism
(Uniform prism)
Square antiprism
(Uniform antiprism) In geometry, a polyhedron (plural polyhedra or polyhedrons) is a solid in three dimensions with flat faces and straight edges. The word polyhedron comes from the Classical Greek πολύεδρον, as poly- (stem of πολύς, "many") + -hedron (form of έδρα, "base", "seat", or "face").
A polyhedron is a 3-dimensional example of the more general polytope in any number of dimensions.
Contents
One modern approach treats a geometric polyhedron as a realisation of some abstract polyhedron. Any such polyhedron can be built up from different kinds of element or entity, each associated with a different number of dimensions:
Characteristics Polyhedral surface A defining characteristic of almost all kinds of polyhedra is that just two faces join along any common edge. This ensures that the polyhedral surface is continuously connected and does not end abruptly or split off in different directions.
Edges Edges have two important characteristics (unless the polyhedron is complex):
Euler characteristic The Euler characteristic χ relates the number of vertices V, edges E, and faces F of a polyhedron:
For a convex polyhedron or more generally for any simply connected polyhedron whose faces are also simply connected and whose boundary is a manifold, χ = 2. For a detailed discussion, see Proofs and Refutations by Imre Lakatos.
Orientability Some polyhedra, such as all convex polyhedra, have two distinct sides to their surface, for example one side can consistently be coloured black and the other white. We say that the figure is orientable.
But for some polyhedra this is not possible, and the figure is said to be non-orientable. All polyhedra with odd-numbered Euler characteristic are non-orientable. A given figure with even χ < 2 may or may not be orientable.
Vertex figure For every vertex one can define a vertex figure, which describes the local structure of the figure around the vertex. If the vertex figure is a regular polygon, then the vertex itself is said to be regular.
Duality
For every polyhedron there exists a dual polyhedron having:
Volume Elementary calculation Any regular polyhedron can be divided up into congruent pyramids, with each pyramid having a face of the polyhedron as its base and the centre of the polyhedron as its apex. The height of a pyramid is equal to the inradius of the polyhedron. If the area of a face is and the in-radius is then the volume of the pyramid is one-third of the base times the height, or . For a regular polyhedron with faces, its volume is then simply
. For instance, a cube with edges of length has six faces, each face being a square with area . The inradius from the center of the face to the center of the cube is . Then the volume is given by
the usual formula for the volume of a cube.
Advanced calculation The volume of any orientable polyhedron can be calculated using the divergence theorem. Consider the vector field , whose divergence is identically 1. The divergence theorem implies that the volume is equal to a surface integral of :
When Ω is the region enclosed by a polyhedron, since the faces of a polyhedron are planar and have piecewise constant normal vectors, this simplifies to
where for the i'th face, is the face barycenter, is its normal vector, and is its area.[3] Once the faces are decomposed in a set of non-overlapping triangles with surface normals pointing away from the volume, the volume is a sixths of the sum over the triple products of the nine Cartesian vertex coordinates of the triangles.
Since it may be difficult to enumerate the faces, volume computation may be challenging, and hence there exist specialized algorithms to determine the volume (many of these generalize to convex polytopes in higher dimensions).[4]
Names of polyhedra Polyhedra are often named according to the number of faces. The naming system is again based on Classical Greek, for example tetrahedron (4), pentahedron (5), hexahedron (6), heptahedron (7), triacontahedron (30), and so on. Sometimes this is qualified by a description of the kinds of faces present, for example the Rhombic dodecahedron vs. the Pentagonal dodecahedron.
Some polyhedra have gained common names, for example the regular hexahedron is commonly known as the cube. Others are named after their discoverer, such as Miller's monster or the Szilassi polyhedron.
Other common names indicate that some operation has been performed on a simpler polyhedron, for example the truncated cube looks like a cube with its corners cut off, and has 14 faces (so it is also an example of a tetrakaidecahedron or tetradecahedron).
Traditional polyhedra A dodecahedron In geometry, a polyhedron is traditionally a three-dimensional shape that is made up of a finite number of polygonal faces which are parts of planes; the faces meet in pairs along edges which are straight-line segments, and the edges meet in points called vertices. Cubes, prisms and pyramids are examples of polyhedra. The polyhedron surrounds a bounded volume in three-dimensional space; sometimes this interior volume is considered to be part of the polyhedron, sometimes only the surface is considered, and occasionally only the skeleton of edges.
A polyhedron is said to be convex if its surface (comprising its faces, edges and vertices) does not intersect itself and the line segment joining any two points of the polyhedron is contained in the interior or surface.
Symmetrical polyhedra Many of the most studied polyhedra are highly symmetrical.
Of course it is easy to distort such polyhedra so they are no longer symmetrical. But where a polyhedral name is given, such as icosidodecahedron, the most symmetrical geometry is almost always implied, unless otherwise stated.
Some of the most common names in particular are often used with "regular" in front or implied because for each there are different types which have little in common except for having the same number of faces. These are the triangular pyramid or tetrahedron, cube or hexahedron, octahedron, dodecahedron and icosahedron:
There are several types of highly-symmetric polyhedron, classified by which kind of element - faces, edges and/or vertices - belong to a single symmetry orbit:
Uniform polyhedra and their duals Main article: Uniform polyhedron Uniform polyhedra are vertex-transitive and every face is a regular polygon. They may be regular, quasi-regular, or semi-regular, and may be convex or starry.
The uniform duals are face-transitive and every vertex figure is a regular polygon.
Face-transitivity of a polyhedron corresponds to vertex-transitivity of the dual and conversely, and edge-transitivity of a polyhedron corresponds to edge-transitivity of the dual. The dual of a regular polyhedron is also regular. The dual of a non-regular uniform polyhedron (called a Catalan solid if convex) has irregular faces.
Each uniform polyhedron shares the same symmetry as its dual, with the symmetries of faces and vertices simply swapped over. Because of this some authorities regard the duals as uniform too. But this idea is not held widely: a polyhedron and its symmetries are not the same thing.
The uniform polyhedra and their duals are traditionally classified according to their degree of symmetry, and whether they are convex or not.
Convex uniform Convex uniform dual Star uniform Star uniform dual Regular Platonic solids Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra Quasiregular Archimedean solids Catalan solids (no special name) (no special name) Semiregular (no special name) (no special name) Prisms Dipyramids Star Prisms Star Dipyramids Antiprisms Trapezohedra Star Antiprisms Star Trapezohedra Noble polyhedra Main article: Noble polyhedron A noble polyhedron is both isohedral (equal-faced) and isogonal (equal-cornered). Besides the regular polyhedra, there are many other examples.
The dual of a noble polyhedron is also noble.
Symmetry groups The polyhedral symmetry groups (using Schoenflies notation) are all point groups and include:
Other polyhedra with regular faces Equal regular faces A few families of polyhedra, where every face is the same kind of polygon:
Deltahedra A deltahedron (plural deltahedra) is a polyhedron whose faces are all equilateral triangles. There are infinitely many deltahedra, but only eight of these are convex:
Other important families of polyhedra Pyramids Main article: Pyramid (geometry) Pyramids include some of the most time-honoured and famous of all polyhedra.
Stellations and facettings Main article: Stellation Stellation of a polyhedron is the process of extending the faces (within their planes) so that they meet to form a new polyhedron.
It is the exact reciprocal to the process of facetting which is the process of removing parts of a polyhedron without creating any new vertices.
Zonohedra Main article: Zonohedron A zonohedron is a convex polyhedron where every face is a polygon with inversion symmetry or, equivalently, symmetry under rotations through 180°.
Toroidal polyhedra Main article: Toroidal polyhedron A toroidal polyhedron is a polyhedron with an Euler characteristic of 0 or smaller, equivalent to a Genus of 1 or greater, representing a torus surface having one or more holes through the middle.
Compounds Main article: Polyhedral compound Polyhedral compounds are formed as compounds of two or more polyhedra.
These compounds often share the same vertices as other polyhedra and are often formed by stellation. Some are listed in the list of Wenninger polyhedron models.
Orthogonal polyhedra An orthogonal polyhedron is one all of whose faces meet at right angles, and all of whose edges are parallel to axes of a Cartesian coordinate system. Aside from a rectangular box, orthogonal polyhedra are nonconvex. They are the 3D analogs of 2D orthogonal polygons, also known as rectilinear polygons. Orthogonal polyhedra are used in computational geometry, where their constrained structure has enabled advances on problems unsolved for arbitrary polyhedra, for example, unfolding the surface of a polyhedron to a polygonal net.
Generalisations of polyhedra The name 'polyhedron' has come to be used for a variety of objects having similar structural properties to traditional polyhedra.
Apeirohedra A classical polyhedral surface comprises finite, bounded plane regions, joined in pairs along edges. If such a surface extends indefinitely it is called an apeirohedron. Examples include:
Complex polyhedra A complex polyhedron is one which is constructed in complex Hilbert 3-space. This space has six dimensions: three real ones corresponding to ordinary space, with each accompanied by an imaginary dimension. See for example Coxeter (1974).
Curved polyhedra Some fields of study allow polyhedra to have curved faces and edges.
Spherical polyhedra Main article: Spherical polyhedron The surface of a sphere may be divided by line segments into bounded regions, to form a spherical polyhedron. Much of the theory of symmetrical polyhedra is most conveniently derived in this way.
Spherical polyhedra have a long and respectable history:
Curved spacefilling polyhedra Two important types are:
Analytically, such a convex polyhedron is expressed as the solution set for a system of linear inequalities. Defining polyhedra in this way provides a geometric perspective for problems in Linear programming.
Many traditional polyhedral forms are general polyhedra. Other examples include:
Non-geometric polyhedra Various mathematical constructs have been found to have properties also present in traditional polyhedra.
Topological polyhedra A topological polytope is a topological space given along with a specific decomposition into shapes that are topologically equivalent to convex polytopes and that are attached to each other in a regular way.
Such a figure is called simplicial if each of its regions is a simplex, i.e. in an n-dimensional space each region has n+1 vertices. The dual of a simplicial polytope is called simple. Similarly, a widely studied class of polytopes (polyhedra) is that of cubical polyhedra, when the basic building block is an n-dimensional cube.
Abstract polyhedra An abstract polyhedron is a partially ordered set (poset) of elements whose partial ordering obeys certain rules. Theories differ in detail, but essentially the elements of the set correspond to the body, faces, edges and vertices of the polyhedron. The empty set corresponds to the null polytope, or nullitope, which has a dimensionality of −1. These posets belong to the larger family of abstract polytopes in any number of dimensions.
Polyhedra as graphs Any polyhedron gives rise to a graph, or skeleton, with corresponding vertices and edges. Thus graph terminology and properties can be applied to polyhedra. For example:
Other polyhedra have of course made their mark in architecture—cubes and cuboids being obvious examples, with the earliest four-sided pyramids of ancient Egypt also dating from the Stone Age.
The Etruscans preceded the Greeks in their awareness of at least some of the regular polyhedra, as evidenced by the discovery near Padua (in Northern Italy) in the late 19th century of a dodecahedron made of soapstone, and dating back more than 2,500 years (Lindemann, 1987).
Greeks The earliest known written records of these shapes come from Classical Greek authors, who also gave the first known mathematical description of them. The earlier Greeks were interested primarily in the convex regular polyhedra, which came to be known as the Platonic solids. Pythagoras knew at least three of them, and Theaetetus (circa 417 B. C.) described all five. Eventually, Euclid described their construction in his Elements. Later, Archimedes expanded his study to the convex uniform polyhedra which now bear his name. His original work is lost and his solids come down to us through Pappus.
Chinese By 236 AD, in China Liu Hui was describing the dissection of the cube into its characteristic tetrahedron (orthoscheme) and related solids, using assemblages of these solids as the basis for calculating volumes of earth to be moved during engineering excavations.
Islamic After the end of the Classical era, scholars in the Islamic civilisation continued to take the Greek knowledge forward (see Mathematics in medieval Islam).
The 9th century scholar Thabit ibn Qurra gave formulae for calculating the volumes of polyhedra such as truncated pyramids.
Then in the 10th century Abu'l Wafa described the convex regular and quasiregular spherical polyhedra.
Renaissance As with other areas of Greek thought maintained and enhanced by Islamic scholars, Western interest in polyhedra revived during the Italian Renaissance. Artists constructed skeletal polyhedra, depicting them from life as a part of their investigations into perspective. Several appear in marquetry panels of the period. Piero della Francesca gave the first written description of direct geometrical construction of such perspective views of polyhedra. Leonardo da Vinci made skeletal models of several polyhedra and drew illustrations of them for a book by Pacioli. A painting by an anonymous artist of Pacioli and a pupli depicts a glass rhombicuboctahedron half-filled with water.
As the Renaissance spread beyond Italy, later artists such as Wenzel Jamnitzer, Dürer and others also depicted polyhedra of various kinds, many of them novel, in imaginative etchings.
Star polyhedra For almost 2,000 years, the concept of a polyhedron as a convex solid had remained as developed by the ancient Greek mathematicians.
During the Renaissance star forms were discovered. A marble tarsia in the floor of St. Mark's Basilica, Venice, depicts a stellated dodecahedron. Artists such as Wenzel Jamnitzer delighted in depicting novel star-like forms of increasing complexity.
Johannes Kepler realised that star polygons, typically pentagrams, could be used to build star polyhedra. Some of these star polyhedra may have been discovered before Kepler's time, but he was the first to recognise that they could be considered "regular" if one removed the restriction that regular polytopes be convex. Later, Louis Poinsot realised that star vertex figures (circuits around each corner) can also be used, and discovered the remaining two regular star polyhedra. Cauchy proved Poinsot's list complete, and Cayley gave them their accepted English names: (Kepler's) the small stellated dodecahedron and great stellated dodecahedron, and (Poinsot's) the great icosahedron and great dodecahedron. Collectively they are called the Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra.
The Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra may be constructed from the Platonic solids by a process called stellation. Most stellations are not regular. The study of stellations of the Platonic solids was given a big push by H. S. M. Coxeter and others in 1938, with the now famous paper The 59 icosahedra. This work has recently been re-published (Coxeter, 1999).
The reciprocal process to stellation is called facetting (or faceting). Every stellation of one polytope is dual, or reciprocal, to some facetting of the dual polytope. The regular star polyhedra can also be obtained by facetting the Platonic solids. Bridge 1974 listed the simpler facettings of the dodecahedron, and reciprocated them to discover a stellation of the icosahedron that was missing from the famous "59". More have been discovered since, and the story is not yet ended.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyhedron
NON POLYHEDRON
A non polyhedron does not have these properties, maybe it is not closed, maybe one or more of the sides is a curved surface. In some branches of topology the sides of a polyhedron cannot intersect each other.
http://wiki.answers.com
Dodecahedron
(Regular polyhedron)
Small stellated dodecahedron
(Regular star)
Icosidodecahedron
(Uniform/Quasiregular)
Great cubicuboctahedron
(Uniform star)
Rhombic triacontahedron
(Uniform/Quasiregular dual)
Elongated pentagonal cupola
(Convex regular-faced)
Octagonal prism
(Uniform prism)
Square antiprism
(Uniform antiprism) In geometry, a polyhedron (plural polyhedra or polyhedrons) is a solid in three dimensions with flat faces and straight edges. The word polyhedron comes from the Classical Greek πολύεδρον, as poly- (stem of πολύς, "many") + -hedron (form of έδρα, "base", "seat", or "face").
A polyhedron is a 3-dimensional example of the more general polytope in any number of dimensions.
Contents
- 1 Basis for definition
- 2 Characteristics
- 3 Names of polyhedra
- 4 Traditional polyhedra
- 5 Generalisations of polyhedra
- 6 Non-geometric polyhedra
- 7 History
- 8 Polyhedra in nature
- 9 See also
- 10 References
- 11 Books on polyhedra
- 12 External links
One modern approach treats a geometric polyhedron as a realisation of some abstract polyhedron. Any such polyhedron can be built up from different kinds of element or entity, each associated with a different number of dimensions:
- 3 dimensions: The body is bounded by the faces, and is usually the volume enclosed by them.
- 2 dimensions: A face is a polygon bounded by a circuit of edges, and usually including the flat (plane) region inside the boundary. These polygonal faces together make up the polyhedral surface.
- 1 dimension: An edge joins one vertex to another and one face to another, and is usually a line segment. The edges together make up the polyhedral skeleton.
- 0 dimensions: A vertex (plural vertices) is a corner point.
- −1 dimension: The null polytope is a kind of mathematical convention required by abstract set-based definitions, and may be represented geometrically as the empty set of points. From an inductive dimension approach, the boundary of a point is the empty set and it has dimension one less than a point, leading to a dimension of −1.
Characteristics Polyhedral surface A defining characteristic of almost all kinds of polyhedra is that just two faces join along any common edge. This ensures that the polyhedral surface is continuously connected and does not end abruptly or split off in different directions.
Edges Edges have two important characteristics (unless the polyhedron is complex):
- An edge joins just two vertices.
- An edge joins just two faces.
Euler characteristic The Euler characteristic χ relates the number of vertices V, edges E, and faces F of a polyhedron:
For a convex polyhedron or more generally for any simply connected polyhedron whose faces are also simply connected and whose boundary is a manifold, χ = 2. For a detailed discussion, see Proofs and Refutations by Imre Lakatos.
Orientability Some polyhedra, such as all convex polyhedra, have two distinct sides to their surface, for example one side can consistently be coloured black and the other white. We say that the figure is orientable.
But for some polyhedra this is not possible, and the figure is said to be non-orientable. All polyhedra with odd-numbered Euler characteristic are non-orientable. A given figure with even χ < 2 may or may not be orientable.
Vertex figure For every vertex one can define a vertex figure, which describes the local structure of the figure around the vertex. If the vertex figure is a regular polygon, then the vertex itself is said to be regular.
Duality
For every polyhedron there exists a dual polyhedron having:
- faces in place of the original's vertices and vice versa,
- the same number of edges
- the same Euler characteristic and orientability
Volume Elementary calculation Any regular polyhedron can be divided up into congruent pyramids, with each pyramid having a face of the polyhedron as its base and the centre of the polyhedron as its apex. The height of a pyramid is equal to the inradius of the polyhedron. If the area of a face is and the in-radius is then the volume of the pyramid is one-third of the base times the height, or . For a regular polyhedron with faces, its volume is then simply
. For instance, a cube with edges of length has six faces, each face being a square with area . The inradius from the center of the face to the center of the cube is . Then the volume is given by
the usual formula for the volume of a cube.
Advanced calculation The volume of any orientable polyhedron can be calculated using the divergence theorem. Consider the vector field , whose divergence is identically 1. The divergence theorem implies that the volume is equal to a surface integral of :
When Ω is the region enclosed by a polyhedron, since the faces of a polyhedron are planar and have piecewise constant normal vectors, this simplifies to
where for the i'th face, is the face barycenter, is its normal vector, and is its area.[3] Once the faces are decomposed in a set of non-overlapping triangles with surface normals pointing away from the volume, the volume is a sixths of the sum over the triple products of the nine Cartesian vertex coordinates of the triangles.
Since it may be difficult to enumerate the faces, volume computation may be challenging, and hence there exist specialized algorithms to determine the volume (many of these generalize to convex polytopes in higher dimensions).[4]
Names of polyhedra Polyhedra are often named according to the number of faces. The naming system is again based on Classical Greek, for example tetrahedron (4), pentahedron (5), hexahedron (6), heptahedron (7), triacontahedron (30), and so on. Sometimes this is qualified by a description of the kinds of faces present, for example the Rhombic dodecahedron vs. the Pentagonal dodecahedron.
Some polyhedra have gained common names, for example the regular hexahedron is commonly known as the cube. Others are named after their discoverer, such as Miller's monster or the Szilassi polyhedron.
Other common names indicate that some operation has been performed on a simpler polyhedron, for example the truncated cube looks like a cube with its corners cut off, and has 14 faces (so it is also an example of a tetrakaidecahedron or tetradecahedron).
Traditional polyhedra A dodecahedron In geometry, a polyhedron is traditionally a three-dimensional shape that is made up of a finite number of polygonal faces which are parts of planes; the faces meet in pairs along edges which are straight-line segments, and the edges meet in points called vertices. Cubes, prisms and pyramids are examples of polyhedra. The polyhedron surrounds a bounded volume in three-dimensional space; sometimes this interior volume is considered to be part of the polyhedron, sometimes only the surface is considered, and occasionally only the skeleton of edges.
A polyhedron is said to be convex if its surface (comprising its faces, edges and vertices) does not intersect itself and the line segment joining any two points of the polyhedron is contained in the interior or surface.
Symmetrical polyhedra Many of the most studied polyhedra are highly symmetrical.
Of course it is easy to distort such polyhedra so they are no longer symmetrical. But where a polyhedral name is given, such as icosidodecahedron, the most symmetrical geometry is almost always implied, unless otherwise stated.
Some of the most common names in particular are often used with "regular" in front or implied because for each there are different types which have little in common except for having the same number of faces. These are the triangular pyramid or tetrahedron, cube or hexahedron, octahedron, dodecahedron and icosahedron:
There are several types of highly-symmetric polyhedron, classified by which kind of element - faces, edges and/or vertices - belong to a single symmetry orbit:
- Isogonal or Vertex-transitive if all vertices are the same, in the sense that for any two vertices there exists a symmetry of the polyhedron mapping the first isometrically onto the second.
- Isotoxal or Edge-transitive if all edges are the same, in the sense that for any two edges there exists a symmetry of the polyhedron mapping the first isometrically onto the second.
- Isohedral or Face-transitive if all faces are the same, in the sense that for any two faces there exists a symmetry of the polyhedron mapping the first isometrically onto the second.
- Regular if it is vertex-transitive, edge-transitive and face-transitive (this implies that every face is the same regular polygon; it also implies that every vertex is regular).
- Quasi-regular if it is vertex-transitive and edge-transitive (and hence has regular faces) but not face-transitive. A quasi-regular dual is face-transitive and edge-transitive (and hence every vertex is regular) but not vertex-transitive.
- Semi-regular if it is vertex-transitive but not edge-transitive, and every face is a regular polygon. (This is one of several definitions of the term, depending on author. Some definitions overlap with the quasi-regular class). A semi-regular dual is face-transitive but not vertex-transitive, and every vertex is regular.
- Uniform if it is vertex-transitive and every face is a regular polygon, i.e. it is regular, quasi-regular or semi-regular. A uniform dual is face-transitive and has regular vertices, but is not necessarily vertex-transitive).
- Noble if it is face-transitive and vertex-transitive (but not necessarily edge-transitive). The regular polyhedra are also noble; they are the only noble uniform polyhedra.
Uniform polyhedra and their duals Main article: Uniform polyhedron Uniform polyhedra are vertex-transitive and every face is a regular polygon. They may be regular, quasi-regular, or semi-regular, and may be convex or starry.
The uniform duals are face-transitive and every vertex figure is a regular polygon.
Face-transitivity of a polyhedron corresponds to vertex-transitivity of the dual and conversely, and edge-transitivity of a polyhedron corresponds to edge-transitivity of the dual. The dual of a regular polyhedron is also regular. The dual of a non-regular uniform polyhedron (called a Catalan solid if convex) has irregular faces.
Each uniform polyhedron shares the same symmetry as its dual, with the symmetries of faces and vertices simply swapped over. Because of this some authorities regard the duals as uniform too. But this idea is not held widely: a polyhedron and its symmetries are not the same thing.
The uniform polyhedra and their duals are traditionally classified according to their degree of symmetry, and whether they are convex or not.
Convex uniform Convex uniform dual Star uniform Star uniform dual Regular Platonic solids Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra Quasiregular Archimedean solids Catalan solids (no special name) (no special name) Semiregular (no special name) (no special name) Prisms Dipyramids Star Prisms Star Dipyramids Antiprisms Trapezohedra Star Antiprisms Star Trapezohedra Noble polyhedra Main article: Noble polyhedron A noble polyhedron is both isohedral (equal-faced) and isogonal (equal-cornered). Besides the regular polyhedra, there are many other examples.
The dual of a noble polyhedron is also noble.
Symmetry groups The polyhedral symmetry groups (using Schoenflies notation) are all point groups and include:
- T - chiral tetrahedral symmetry; the rotation group for a regular tetrahedron; order 12.
- Td - full tetrahedral symmetry; the symmetry group for a regular tetrahedron; order 24.
- Th - pyritohedral symmetry; order 24. The symmetry of a pyritohedron.
- O - chiral octahedral symmetry;the rotation group of the cube and octahedron; order 24.
- Oh - full octahedral symmetry; the symmetry group of the cube and octahedron; order 48.
- I - chiral icosahedral symmetry; the rotation group of the icosahedron and the dodecahedron; order 60.
- Ih - full icosahedral symmetry; the symmetry group of the icosahedron and the dodecahedron; order 120.
- Cnv - n-fold pyramidal symmetry
- Dnh - n-fold prismatic symmetry
- Dnv - n-fold antiprismatic symmetry.
Other polyhedra with regular faces Equal regular faces A few families of polyhedra, where every face is the same kind of polygon:
- Deltahedra have equilateral triangles for faces.
- With regard to polyhedra whose faces are all squares: if coplanar faces are not allowed, even if they are disconnected, there is only the cube. Otherwise there is also the result of pasting six cubes to the sides of one, all seven of the same size; it has 30 square faces (counting disconnected faces in the same plane as separate). This can be extended in one, two, or three directions: we can consider the union of arbitrarily many copies of these structures, obtained by translations of (expressed in cube sizes) (2,0,0), (0,2,0), and/or (0,0,2), hence with each adjacent pair having one common cube. The result can be any connected set of cubes with positions (a,b,c), with integers a,b,c of which at most one is even.
- There is no special name for polyhedra whose faces are all equilateral pentagons or pentagrams. There are infinitely many of these, but only one is convex: the dodecahedron. The rest are assembled by (pasting) combinations of the regular polyhedra described earlier: the dodecahedron, the small stellated dodecahedron, the great stellated dodecahedron and the great icosahedron.
Deltahedra A deltahedron (plural deltahedra) is a polyhedron whose faces are all equilateral triangles. There are infinitely many deltahedra, but only eight of these are convex:
- 3 regular convex polyhedra (3 of the Platonic solids)
- 5 non-uniform convex polyhedra (5 of the Johnson solids)
Other important families of polyhedra Pyramids Main article: Pyramid (geometry) Pyramids include some of the most time-honoured and famous of all polyhedra.
Stellations and facettings Main article: Stellation Stellation of a polyhedron is the process of extending the faces (within their planes) so that they meet to form a new polyhedron.
It is the exact reciprocal to the process of facetting which is the process of removing parts of a polyhedron without creating any new vertices.
Zonohedra Main article: Zonohedron A zonohedron is a convex polyhedron where every face is a polygon with inversion symmetry or, equivalently, symmetry under rotations through 180°.
Toroidal polyhedra Main article: Toroidal polyhedron A toroidal polyhedron is a polyhedron with an Euler characteristic of 0 or smaller, equivalent to a Genus of 1 or greater, representing a torus surface having one or more holes through the middle.
Compounds Main article: Polyhedral compound Polyhedral compounds are formed as compounds of two or more polyhedra.
These compounds often share the same vertices as other polyhedra and are often formed by stellation. Some are listed in the list of Wenninger polyhedron models.
Orthogonal polyhedra An orthogonal polyhedron is one all of whose faces meet at right angles, and all of whose edges are parallel to axes of a Cartesian coordinate system. Aside from a rectangular box, orthogonal polyhedra are nonconvex. They are the 3D analogs of 2D orthogonal polygons, also known as rectilinear polygons. Orthogonal polyhedra are used in computational geometry, where their constrained structure has enabled advances on problems unsolved for arbitrary polyhedra, for example, unfolding the surface of a polyhedron to a polygonal net.
Generalisations of polyhedra The name 'polyhedron' has come to be used for a variety of objects having similar structural properties to traditional polyhedra.
Apeirohedra A classical polyhedral surface comprises finite, bounded plane regions, joined in pairs along edges. If such a surface extends indefinitely it is called an apeirohedron. Examples include:
- Tilings or tessellations of the plane.
- Sponge-like structures called infinite skew polyhedra.
Complex polyhedra A complex polyhedron is one which is constructed in complex Hilbert 3-space. This space has six dimensions: three real ones corresponding to ordinary space, with each accompanied by an imaginary dimension. See for example Coxeter (1974).
Curved polyhedra Some fields of study allow polyhedra to have curved faces and edges.
Spherical polyhedra Main article: Spherical polyhedron The surface of a sphere may be divided by line segments into bounded regions, to form a spherical polyhedron. Much of the theory of symmetrical polyhedra is most conveniently derived in this way.
Spherical polyhedra have a long and respectable history:
- The first known man-made polyhedra are spherical polyhedra carved in stone.
- Poinsot used spherical polyhedra to discover the four regular star polyhedra.
- Coxeter used them to enumerate all but one of the uniform polyhedra.
Curved spacefilling polyhedra Two important types are:
- Bubbles in froths and foams, such as Weaire-Phelan bubbles.
- Spacefilling forms used in architecture. See for example Pearce (1978).
Analytically, such a convex polyhedron is expressed as the solution set for a system of linear inequalities. Defining polyhedra in this way provides a geometric perspective for problems in Linear programming.
Many traditional polyhedral forms are general polyhedra. Other examples include:
- A quadrant in the plane. For instance, the region of the cartesian plane consisting of all points above the horizontal axis and to the right of the vertical axis: { ( x, y ) : x ≥ 0, y ≥ 0 }. Its sides are the two positive axes.
- An octant in Euclidean 3-space, { ( x, y, z ) : x ≥ 0, y ≥ 0, z ≥ 0 }.
- A prism of infinite extent. For instance a doubly infinite square prism in 3-space, consisting of a square in the xy-plane swept along the z-axis: { ( x, y, z ) : 0 ≤ x ≤ 1, 0 ≤ y ≤ 1 }.
- Each cell in a Voronoi tessellation is a convex polyhedron. In the Voronoi tessellation of a set S, the cell A corresponding to a point c∈S is bounded (hence a traditional polyhedron) when c lies in the interior of the convex hull of S, and otherwise (when c lies on the boundary of the convex hull of S) A is unbounded.
Non-geometric polyhedra Various mathematical constructs have been found to have properties also present in traditional polyhedra.
Topological polyhedra A topological polytope is a topological space given along with a specific decomposition into shapes that are topologically equivalent to convex polytopes and that are attached to each other in a regular way.
Such a figure is called simplicial if each of its regions is a simplex, i.e. in an n-dimensional space each region has n+1 vertices. The dual of a simplicial polytope is called simple. Similarly, a widely studied class of polytopes (polyhedra) is that of cubical polyhedra, when the basic building block is an n-dimensional cube.
Abstract polyhedra An abstract polyhedron is a partially ordered set (poset) of elements whose partial ordering obeys certain rules. Theories differ in detail, but essentially the elements of the set correspond to the body, faces, edges and vertices of the polyhedron. The empty set corresponds to the null polytope, or nullitope, which has a dimensionality of −1. These posets belong to the larger family of abstract polytopes in any number of dimensions.
Polyhedra as graphs Any polyhedron gives rise to a graph, or skeleton, with corresponding vertices and edges. Thus graph terminology and properties can be applied to polyhedra. For example:
- Due to Steinitz theorem convex polyhedra are in one-to-one correspondence with 3-connected planar graphs.
- The tetrahedron gives rise to a complete graph (K4). It is the only polyhedron to do so.
- The octahedron gives rise to a strongly regular graph, because adjacent vertices always have two common neighbors, and non-adjacent vertices have four.
- The Archimedean solids give rise to regular graphs: 7 of the Archimedean solids are of degree 3, 4 of degree 4, and the remaining 2 are chiral pairs of degree 5.
Other polyhedra have of course made their mark in architecture—cubes and cuboids being obvious examples, with the earliest four-sided pyramids of ancient Egypt also dating from the Stone Age.
The Etruscans preceded the Greeks in their awareness of at least some of the regular polyhedra, as evidenced by the discovery near Padua (in Northern Italy) in the late 19th century of a dodecahedron made of soapstone, and dating back more than 2,500 years (Lindemann, 1987).
Greeks The earliest known written records of these shapes come from Classical Greek authors, who also gave the first known mathematical description of them. The earlier Greeks were interested primarily in the convex regular polyhedra, which came to be known as the Platonic solids. Pythagoras knew at least three of them, and Theaetetus (circa 417 B. C.) described all five. Eventually, Euclid described their construction in his Elements. Later, Archimedes expanded his study to the convex uniform polyhedra which now bear his name. His original work is lost and his solids come down to us through Pappus.
Chinese By 236 AD, in China Liu Hui was describing the dissection of the cube into its characteristic tetrahedron (orthoscheme) and related solids, using assemblages of these solids as the basis for calculating volumes of earth to be moved during engineering excavations.
Islamic After the end of the Classical era, scholars in the Islamic civilisation continued to take the Greek knowledge forward (see Mathematics in medieval Islam).
The 9th century scholar Thabit ibn Qurra gave formulae for calculating the volumes of polyhedra such as truncated pyramids.
Then in the 10th century Abu'l Wafa described the convex regular and quasiregular spherical polyhedra.
Renaissance As with other areas of Greek thought maintained and enhanced by Islamic scholars, Western interest in polyhedra revived during the Italian Renaissance. Artists constructed skeletal polyhedra, depicting them from life as a part of their investigations into perspective. Several appear in marquetry panels of the period. Piero della Francesca gave the first written description of direct geometrical construction of such perspective views of polyhedra. Leonardo da Vinci made skeletal models of several polyhedra and drew illustrations of them for a book by Pacioli. A painting by an anonymous artist of Pacioli and a pupli depicts a glass rhombicuboctahedron half-filled with water.
As the Renaissance spread beyond Italy, later artists such as Wenzel Jamnitzer, Dürer and others also depicted polyhedra of various kinds, many of them novel, in imaginative etchings.
Star polyhedra For almost 2,000 years, the concept of a polyhedron as a convex solid had remained as developed by the ancient Greek mathematicians.
During the Renaissance star forms were discovered. A marble tarsia in the floor of St. Mark's Basilica, Venice, depicts a stellated dodecahedron. Artists such as Wenzel Jamnitzer delighted in depicting novel star-like forms of increasing complexity.
Johannes Kepler realised that star polygons, typically pentagrams, could be used to build star polyhedra. Some of these star polyhedra may have been discovered before Kepler's time, but he was the first to recognise that they could be considered "regular" if one removed the restriction that regular polytopes be convex. Later, Louis Poinsot realised that star vertex figures (circuits around each corner) can also be used, and discovered the remaining two regular star polyhedra. Cauchy proved Poinsot's list complete, and Cayley gave them their accepted English names: (Kepler's) the small stellated dodecahedron and great stellated dodecahedron, and (Poinsot's) the great icosahedron and great dodecahedron. Collectively they are called the Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra.
The Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra may be constructed from the Platonic solids by a process called stellation. Most stellations are not regular. The study of stellations of the Platonic solids was given a big push by H. S. M. Coxeter and others in 1938, with the now famous paper The 59 icosahedra. This work has recently been re-published (Coxeter, 1999).
The reciprocal process to stellation is called facetting (or faceting). Every stellation of one polytope is dual, or reciprocal, to some facetting of the dual polytope. The regular star polyhedra can also be obtained by facetting the Platonic solids. Bridge 1974 listed the simpler facettings of the dodecahedron, and reciprocated them to discover a stellation of the icosahedron that was missing from the famous "59". More have been discovered since, and the story is not yet ended.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyhedron
NON POLYHEDRON
A non polyhedron does not have these properties, maybe it is not closed, maybe one or more of the sides is a curved surface. In some branches of topology the sides of a polyhedron cannot intersect each other.
http://wiki.answers.com