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  2. Table of polyhedron dihedral angles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_of_polyhedron...

    exact dihedral angle (radians) dihedral angle – exact in bold, else approximate (degrees) Platonic solids (regular convex) Tetrahedron {3,3} (3.3.3) arccos (⁠ 1 / 3 ⁠) 70.529° Hexahedron or Cube {4,3} (4.4.4) arccos (0) = ⁠ π / 2 ⁠ 90° Octahedron {3,4} (3.3.3.3) arccos (-⁠ 1 / 3 ⁠) 109.471° Dodecahedron {5,3} (5.5.5) arccos ...

  3. Dihedral angle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihedral_angle

    An angle of 0° means the face normal vectors are antiparallel and the faces overlap each other, which implies that it is part of a degenerate polyhedron. An angle of 180° means the faces are parallel, as in a tiling. An angle greater than 180° exists on concave portions of a polyhedron. Every dihedral angle in an edge-transitive polyhedron ...

  4. Ideal polyhedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_polyhedron

    This fact can be used to calculate the dihedral angles themselves for a regular or edge-symmetric ideal polyhedron (in which all these angles are equal), by counting how many edges meet at each vertex: an ideal regular tetrahedron, cube or dodecahedron, with three edges per vertex, has dihedral angles = / = (), an ideal regular octahedron or ...

  5. Platonic solid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platonic_solid

    The solid angle, Ω, at the vertex of a Platonic solid is given in terms of the dihedral angle by Ω = q θ − ( q − 2 ) π . {\displaystyle \Omega =q\theta -(q-2)\pi .\,} This follows from the spherical excess formula for a spherical polygon and the fact that the vertex figure of the polyhedron { p , q } is a regular q -gon.

  6. Exsphere (polyhedra) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exsphere_(polyhedra)

    The exsphere touches the face of the regular polyedron at the center of the incircle of that face. If the exsphere radius is denoted r ex, the radius of this incircle r in and the dihedral angle between the face and the extension of the adjacent face δ, the center of the exsphere is located from the viewpoint at the middle of one edge of the face by bisecting the dihedral angle.

  7. Cuboctahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuboctahedron

    The dihedral angle of a triangular cupola between square-to-triangle is approximately 125°, that between square-to-hexagon is 54.7°, and that between triangle-to-hexagon is 70.5°. Therefore, the dihedral angle of a cuboctahedron between square-to-triangle, on the edge where the base of two triangular cupolas are attached is 54.7° + 70.5 ...

  8. Great rhombidodecacron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_rhombidodecacron

    The dihedral angle equals ⁡ (+). The ratio between the lengths of the long edges and the short ones equals +, which is the golden ratio. Part of each face lies inside the solid, hence is invisible in solid models.

  9. Deltoidal hexecontahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deltoidal_hexecontahedron

    The opposite angle, between long edges, is arccos(⁠-5+9 √ 5 / 40 ⁠)≈67.783011547435° . The other two angles of each face, between a short and a long edge each, are both equal to arccos(⁠ 5-2 √ 5 / 10 ⁠)≈86.97415549104°. The dihedral angle between any pair of adjacent faces is arccos(⁠-19-8 √ 5 / 41 ⁠)≈154.12136312578°.