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  2. 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).

  3. Uniform polyhedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_polyhedron

    In geometry, a uniform polyhedron has regular polygons as faces and is vertex-transitive—there is an isometry mapping any vertex onto any other. It follows that all vertices are congruent . Uniform polyhedra may be regular (if also face- and edge-transitive ), quasi-regular (if also edge-transitive but not face-transitive), or semi-regular ...

  4. List of uniform polyhedra by vertex figure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_uniform_polyhedra...

    image of polyhedron; name of polyhedron; alternate names (in brackets) Wythoff symbol; Numbering systems: W - number used by Wenninger in polyhedra models, U - uniform indexing, K - Kaleido indexing, C - numbering used in Coxeter et al. 'Uniform Polyhedra'. Number of vertices V, edges E, Faces F and number of faces by type.

  5. Truncation (geometry) - Wikipedia

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

    A special kind of truncation, usually implied, is a uniform truncation, a truncation operator applied to a regular polyhedron (or regular polytope) which creates a resulting uniform polyhedron (uniform polytope) with equal edge lengths. There are no degrees of freedom, and it represents a fixed geometric, just like the regular polyhedra.

  6. Dual uniform polyhedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual_uniform_polyhedron

    The illustration here shows the vertex figure (red) of the cuboctahedron being used to derive the corresponding face (blue) of the rhombic dodecahedron.. For a uniform polyhedron, each face of the dual polyhedron may be derived from the original polyhedron's corresponding vertex figure by using the Dorman Luke construction. [2]

  7. Polyhedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyhedron

    In geometry, a polyhedron (pl.: polyhedra or polyhedrons; from Greek πολύ (poly-) 'many' and ἕδρον (-hedron) 'base, seat') is a three-dimensional figure with flat polygonal faces, straight edges and sharp corners or vertices. The term "polyhedron" may refer either to a solid figure or to its boundary surface.

  8. Rhombicosahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhombicosahedron

    In geometry, the rhombicosahedron is a nonconvex uniform polyhedron, indexed as U 56. It has 50 faces (30 squares and 20 hexagons), 120 edges and 60 vertices. [1] Its vertex figure is an antiparallelogram.

  9. Category:Uniform polyhedra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Uniform_polyhedra

    This category was created to reference the full set of 75 nonprismatic uniform polyhedra, as well as prismatic forms. It is a subset of Category:Polyhedra.. It is a union of 5 Platonic solids, 4 Kepler–Poinsot solids, 13 Archimedean solids, and the infinite prismatic sets in Prismatoid polyhedra, and adds 53 non-convex, non-regular uniform polyhedra.