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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. Kinematics of the cuboctahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinematics_of_the_cub...

    The cuboctahedron can flex this way even if its edges (but not its faces) are rigid. The skeleton of a cuboctahedron, considering its edges as rigid beams connected at flexible joints at its vertices but omitting its faces, does not have structural rigidity. Consequently, its vertices can be repositioned by folding (changing the dihedral angle ...

  4. Cuboctahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuboctahedron

    This process is known as rectification, making the cuboctahedron being named the rectified cube and rectified octahedron. [ 3 ] An alternative construction is by cutting of all of the vertices, known as truncation . can be started from a regular tetrahedron , cutting off the vertices and beveling the edges.

  5. Conway polyhedron notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway_polyhedron_notation

    Meta adds vertices at the center and along the edges, while bevel adds faces at the center, seed vertices, and along the edges. The index is how many vertices or faces are added along the edges. Meta (in its non-indexed form) is also called cantitruncation or omnitruncation. Note that 0 here does not mean the same as for augmentation operations ...

  6. Dual polyhedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual_polyhedron

    The dual of a cube is an octahedron.Vertices of one correspond to faces of the other, and edges correspond to each other. In geometry, every polyhedron is associated with a second dual structure, where the vertices of one correspond to the faces of the other, and the edges between pairs of vertices of one correspond to the edges between pairs of faces of the other. [1]

  7. images.huffingtonpost.com

    images.huffingtonpost.com/2010-07-07-10cv4184.pdf

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  8. Truncation (geometry) - Wikipedia

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

    Faces are reduced to half as many sides, and square faces degenerate into edges. For example, the tetrahedron is an alternated cube, h{4,3}. Diminishment is a more general term used in reference to Johnson solids for the removal of one or more vertices, edges, or faces of a polytope, without disturbing the other vertices.

  9. Chamfer (geometry) - Wikipedia

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

    The chamfered cube is constructed as a chamfer of a cube: the squares are reduced in size and new faces, hexagons, are added in place of all the original edges. The cC is a convex polyhedron with 32 vertices, 48 edges, and 18 faces: 6 congruent (and regular) squares, and 12 congruent flattened hexagons.