enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Honeycomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeycomb

    A honeycomb is a mass of hexagonal prismatic cells built from beeswax by honey bees in their nests to contain their brood (eggs, larvae, and pupae) and stores of honey and pollen. Beekeepers may remove the entire honeycomb to harvest honey.

  3. Honeycomb structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeycomb_structure

    The hexagonal comb of the honey bee has been admired and wondered about from ancient times. The first man-made honeycomb, according to Greek mythology, is said to have been manufactured by Daedalus from gold by lost wax casting more than 3000 years ago. [2]

  4. Honeycomb conjecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeycomb_conjecture

    A regular hexagonal grid This honeycomb forms a circle packing, with circles centered on each hexagon.. The honeycomb conjecture states that a regular hexagonal grid or honeycomb has the least total perimeter of any subdivision of the plane into regions of equal area.

  5. Explanatory indispensability argument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explanatory...

    There are also non-mathematical explanations for the honeycomb case study. Darwin believed that the hexagonal shape of bee combs was the result of tightly packed spherical cells being pushed together and pressed into hexagons, with bees fixing breakages with flat surfaces of wax further contributing to a hexagonal shape. [39]

  6. Triangular prismatic honeycomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangular_prismatic_honeycomb

    The hexagonal prismatic honeycomb or hexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space made up of hexagonal prisms. It is constructed from a hexagonal tiling extruded into prisms. It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.

  7. Hexagonal lattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexagonal_lattice

    The honeycomb point set is a special case of the hexagonal lattice with a two-atom basis. [1] The centers of the hexagons of a honeycomb form a hexagonal lattice, and the honeycomb point set can be seen as the union of two offset hexagonal lattices. In nature, carbon atoms of the two-dimensional material graphene are arranged in a honeycomb ...

  8. Hexagonal tiling honeycomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexagonal_tiling_honeycomb

    The omnitruncated hexagonal tiling honeycomb or omnitruncated order-6 tetrahedral honeycomb, t 0,1,2,3 {6,3,3}, has truncated octahedron, hexagonal prism, dodecagonal prism, and truncated trihexagonal tiling cells, with an irregular tetrahedron vertex figure.

  9. Honeycomb (geometry) - Wikipedia

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

    In geometry, a honeycomb is a space filling or close packing of polyhedral or higher-dimensional cells, so that there are no gaps. It is an example of the more general mathematical tiling or tessellation in any number of dimensions. Its dimension can be clarified as n-honeycomb for a honeycomb of n-dimensional space.