enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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 ...

  3. 9-demicube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9-demicube

    In geometry, a demienneract or 9-demicube is a uniform 9-polytope, constructed from the 9-cube, with alternated vertices removed. It is part of a dimensionally infinite family of uniform polytopes called demihypercubes .

  4. Conway polyhedron notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway_polyhedron_notation

    Augmentation operations retain original edges. They may be applied to any independent subset of faces, or may be converted into a join-form by removing the original edges. Conway notation supports an optional index to these operators: 0 for the join-form, or 3 or higher for how many sides affected faces have.

  5. 9-cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9-cube

    This 9-cube graph is an orthogonal projection. This orientation shows columns of vertices positioned a vertex-edge-vertex distance from one vertex on the left to one vertex on the right, and edges attaching adjacent columns of vertices. The number of vertices in each column represents rows in Pascal's triangle, being 1:9:36:84:126:126:84:36:9:1.

  6. Demihypercube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demihypercube

    Alternation of the n-cube yields one of two n-demicubes, as in this 3-dimensional illustration of the two tetrahedra that arise as the 3-demicubes of the 3-cube.. In geometry, demihypercubes (also called n-demicubes, n-hemicubes, and half measure polytopes) are a class of n-polytopes constructed from alternation of an n-hypercube, labeled as hγ n for being half of the hypercube family, γ n.

  7. 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.

  8. Keller's conjecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keller's_conjecture

    In this tiling of the plane by congruent squares, the green and violet squares meet edge-to-edge as do the blue and orange squares. In geometry, Keller's conjecture is the conjecture that in any tiling of n-dimensional Euclidean space by identical hypercubes, there are two hypercubes that share an entire (n − 1)-dimensional face with each other.

  9. 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]