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  2. Cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube

    Like other cuboids, every face of a cube has four vertices, each of which connects with three congruent lines. These edges form square faces, making the dihedral angle of a cube between every two adjacent squares being the interior angle of a square, 90°. Hence, the cube has six faces, twelve edges, and eight vertices.

  3. Prism (geometry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prism_(geometry)

    An oblique prism is a prism in which the joining edges and faces are not perpendicular to the base faces. Example: a parallelepiped is an oblique prism whose base is a parallelogram, or equivalently a polyhedron with six parallelogram faces. Right Prism. A right prism is a prism in which the joining edges and faces are perpendicular to the base ...

  4. Tetrahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrahedron

    If its three perpendicular edges are of unit length, its remaining edges are two of length √ 2 and one of length √ 3, so all its edges are edges or diagonals of the cube. The cube can be dissected into six such 3-orthoschemes four different ways, with all six surrounding the same √ 3 cube diagonal.

  5. Regular icosahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_icosahedron

    Three mutually perpendicular golden ratio rectangles, with edges connecting their corners, form a regular icosahedron. Another way to construct it is by putting two points on each surface of a cube. In each face, draw a segment line between the midpoints of two opposite edges and locate two points with the golden ratio distance from each midpoint.

  6. 24-cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24-cell

    This removes 4 edges from each hexagonal great circle (retaining just one opposite pair of edges), so no continuous hexagonal great circles remain. Now 3 perpendicular edges meet and form the corner of a cube at each of the 16 remaining vertices, [be] and the 32 remaining edges divide the surface into 24 square faces and 8 cubic cells: a ...

  7. Regular polygon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_polygon

    The cube contains a skew regular hexagon, seen as 6 red edges zig-zagging between two planes perpendicular to the cube's diagonal axis. The zig-zagging side edges of a n-antiprism represent a regular skew 2n-gon, as shown in this 17-gonal antiprism.

  8. Base (geometry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_(geometry)

    The extended base of a triangle (a particular case of an extended side) is the line that contains the base. When the triangle is obtuse and the base is chosen to be one of the sides adjacent to the obtuse angle , then the altitude dropped perpendicularly from the apex to the base intersects the extended base outside of the triangle.

  9. Bidiakis cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bidiakis_cube

    The bidiakis cube can also be constructed from a cube by adding edges across the top and bottom faces which connect the centres of opposite sides of the faces. The two additional edges need to be perpendicular to each other. With this construction, the bidiakis cube is a polyhedral graph, and can be realized as a convex polyhedron.