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  2. 600-cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/600-cell

    The 600-cell is the fifth in the sequence of 6 convex regular 4-polytopes (in order of complexity and size at the same radius). [a] It can be deconstructed into twenty-five overlapping instances of its immediate predecessor the 24-cell, [5] as the 24-cell can be deconstructed into three overlapping instances of its predecessor the tesseract (8-cell), and the 8-cell can be deconstructed into ...

  3. 16-cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16-cell

    The 16-cell is the second in the sequence of 6 convex regular 4-polytopes (in order of size and complexity). [a]Each of its 4 successor convex regular 4-polytopes can be constructed as the convex hull of a polytope compound of multiple 16-cells: the 16-vertex tesseract as a compound of two 16-cells, the 24-vertex 24-cell as a compound of three 16-cells, the 120-vertex 600-cell as a compound of ...

  4. Rectified 600-cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rectified_600-cell

    A related vertex-transitive polytope can be constructed with equal edge lengths removes 120 vertices from the rectified 600-cell, but isn't uniform because it contains square pyramid cells, [1] discovered by George Olshevsky, calling it a swirlprismatodiminished rectified hexacosichoron, with 840 cells (600 square pyramids, 120 pentagonal ...

  5. List of isotoxal polyhedra and tilings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_isotoxal_polyhedra...

    The dual of a non-convex polyhedron is also a non-convex polyhedron. [2] ( By contraposition.) There are ten non-convex isotoxal polyhedra based on the quasiregular octahedron, cuboctahedron, and icosidodecahedron: the five (quasiregular) hemipolyhedra based on the quasiregular octahedron, cuboctahedron, and icosidodecahedron, and their five (infinite) duals:

  6. Icosidodecahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icosidodecahedron

    Fuller (1975) used these 6 great circles, along with 15 and 10 others in two other polyhedra to define his 31 great circles of the spherical icosahedron. [ 6 ] The long radius (center to vertex) of the icosidodecahedron is in the golden ratio to its edge length; thus its radius is φ if its edge length is 1, and its edge length is ⁠ 1 / φ ...

  7. Regular polytope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_polytope

    In mathematics, a regular polytope is a polytope whose symmetry group acts transitively on its flags, thus giving it the highest degree of symmetry.In particular, all its elements or j-faces (for all 0 ≤ j ≤ n, where n is the dimension of the polytope) — cells, faces and so on — are also transitive on the symmetries of the polytope, and are themselves regular polytopes of dimension j≤ n.

  8. Torus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torus

    A toroidal polyhedron with 6 × 4 = 24 quadrilateral faces. Polyhedra with the topological type of a torus are called toroidal polyhedra, and have Euler characteristic V − E + F = 0. For any number of holes, the formula generalizes to V − E + F = 2 − 2N, where N is the number of holes.

  9. Great icosahedron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_icosahedron

    The truncated great stellated dodecahedron is a degenerate polyhedron, with 20 triangular faces from the truncated vertices, and 12 (hidden) doubled up pentagonal faces ({10/2}) as truncations of the original pentagram faces, the latter forming two great dodecahedra inscribed within and sharing the edges of the icosahedron.