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  2. Cubic pyramid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_pyramid

    In 4-dimensional geometry, the cubic pyramid is bounded by one cube on the base and 6 square pyramid cells which meet at the apex. Since a cube has a circumradius divided by edge length less than one, [ 1 ] the square pyramids can be made with regular faces by computing the appropriate height.

  3. Tetrahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrahedron

    These two tetrahedra's vertices combined are the vertices of a cube, demonstrating that the regular tetrahedron is the 3-demicube, a polyhedron that is by alternating a cube. This form has Coxeter diagram and Schläfli symbol h { 4 , 3 } {\displaystyle \mathrm {h} \{4,3\}} .

  4. Pyramid (geometry) - Wikipedia

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

    For the pyramid with an n-sided regular base, it has n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges. [18] Such pyramid has isosceles triangles as its faces, with its symmetry is C nv, a symmetry of order 2n: the pyramids are symmetrical as they rotated around their axis of symmetry (a line passing through the apex and the base centroid), and they ...

  5. Cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube

    As mentioned above, the cube has eight vertices, twelve edges, and six faces; each element in a matrix's diagonal is denoted as 8, 12, and 6. The first column of the middle row indicates that there are two vertices in (i.e., at the extremes of) each edge, denoted as 2; the middle column of the first row indicates that three edges meet at each ...

  6. List of uniform polyhedra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_uniform_polyhedra

    In geometry, a uniform polyhedron is a polyhedron which has regular polygons as faces and is vertex-transitive (transitive on its vertices, isogonal, i.e. there is an isometry mapping any vertex onto any other). It follows that all vertices are congruent, and the polyhedron has a high degree of reflectional and rotational symmetry.

  7. Tetrahedral symmetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrahedral_symmetry

    It is also the symmetry of a pyritohedron, which is extremely similar to the cube described, with each rectangle replaced by a pentagon with one symmetry axis and 4 equal sides and 1 different side (the one corresponding to the line segment dividing the cube's face); i.e., the cube's faces bulge out at the dividing line and become narrower there.

  8. Pentagonal icositetrahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentagonal_icositetrahedron

    Square pyramids are added to the six square faces of the snub cube, and triangular pyramids are added to the eight triangular faces that do not share an edge with a square. The pyramid heights are adjusted to make them coplanar with the other 24 triangular faces of the snub cube. The result is the pentagonal icositetrahedron.

  9. 5-polytope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5-polytope

    A 5-polytope is a closed five-dimensional figure with vertices, edges, faces, and cells, and 4-faces. A vertex is a point where five or more edges meet. An edge is a line segment where four or more faces meet, and a face is a polygon where three or more cells meet. A cell is a polyhedron, and a 4-face is a 4-polytope. Furthermore, the following ...