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  2. Octahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octahedron

    Truncated triangular trapezohedron, also called Dürer's solid: Obtained by truncating two opposite corners of a cube or rhombohedron, this has six pentagon faces and two triangle faces. [27] Octagonal hosohedron: degenerate in Euclidean space, but can be realized spherically. Bricard octahedron with an antiparallelogram as its equator. The ...

  3. List of small polyhedra by vertex count - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_small_polyhedra_by...

    The smallest polyhedron is the tetrahedron with 4 triangular faces, 6 edges, and 4 vertices. Named polyhedra primarily come from the families of platonic solids , Archimedean solids , Catalan solids , and Johnson solids , as well as dihedral symmetry families including the pyramids , bipyramids , prisms , antiprisms , and trapezohedrons .

  4. Tetrahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrahedron

    A 3-orthoscheme is a tetrahedron where all four faces are right triangles. A 3-orthoscheme is not a disphenoid, because its opposite edges are not of equal length. It is not possible to construct a disphenoid with right triangle or obtuse triangle faces.

  5. List of uniform polyhedra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_uniform_polyhedra

    The 5 Platonic solids are called a tetrahedron, hexahedron, octahedron, dodecahedron and icosahedron with 4, 6, 8, 12, and 20 sides respectively. The regular hexahedron is a cube . Table of polyhedra

  6. Cuboctahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuboctahedron

    A cuboctahedron is a polyhedron with 8 triangular faces and 6 square faces. A cuboctahedron has 12 identical vertices, with 2 triangles and 2 squares meeting at each, and 24 identical edges, each separating a triangle from a square.

  7. Archimedean solid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedean_solid

    An example is the rhombicuboctahedron, constructed by separating the cube or octahedron's faces from the centroid and filling them with squares. [8] Snub is a construction process of polyhedra by separating the polyhedron faces, twisting their faces in certain angles, and filling them up with equilateral triangles .

  8. Disdyakis triacontahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disdyakis_triacontahedron

    It has the most faces among the Archimedean and Catalan solids, with the snub dodecahedron, with 92 faces, in second place. If the bipyramids , the gyroelongated bipyramids , and the trapezohedra are excluded, the disdyakis triacontahedron has the most faces of any other strictly convex polyhedron where every face of the polyhedron has the same ...

  9. Triangle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle

    Triangles have many types based on the length of the sides and the angles. A triangle whose sides are all the same length is an equilateral triangle, [3] a triangle with two sides having the same length is an isosceles triangle, [4] [a] and a triangle with three different-length sides is a scalene triangle. [7]