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Page 1: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your
Page 2: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

These are NOT polyhedron:

Page 4: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

-three dimensional;-a closed figure;-made up of flat surfaces which are polygons.

What is a polyhedron?A polyhedron is a three-dimensional solid whose faces are polygons joined at their edges. The word polyhedron is derived from the Greek poly (many) and the Indo-European hedron (seat).

Page 5: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

All of the faces (sides) of a polyhedron are polygons.

The line segments where the faces intersect are called edges.

The point where more than two faces intersect is called a vertex.

edges vertex

face

Page 6: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your
Page 8: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

A polyhedron is said to be regular if its faces are made up of regular polygons.

There are only five regular polyhedra called the Platonic solids.

Crystals are real world examples of polyhedra. The salt you sprinkle on your food is a crystal in the

shape of a cube.

Page 9: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

In mathematics Plato's name is attached to the Platonic solids. In the Timaeus there is a mathematical construction of the elements (earth, fire, air, and water), in which the cube, tetrahedron, octahedron, and icosahedron are given as the shapes of the atoms of earth, fire, air, and water. The fifth Platonic solid, the dodecahedron, is Plato's model for the whole universe.

More info

Page 11: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

-is a polyhedron that has all faces except one intersecting at one point;-has one polygon base;The sides that are not the base and intersect in a single point are triangles.-is named by the shape of its base.

Pentagonal pyramid

Triangular pyramid

Hexagonal pyramid

Page 12: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your
Page 13: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

-is a polyhedron with two congruent bases that are in parallel planes.The faces that are not bases are parallelograms, called lateral faces.-is named by the shape of its bases.

A B

C

D

E

F

Page 14: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

A solid with a pair of circular bases is called a cylinder. Is a cylinder a polyhedron?

Page 15: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

A cone has a circular base and a vertex. Is a cone a polyhedron?

Page 16: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

letter Name of polyhedron

Number of faces

Number of edges

Number of vertices

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

Complete the table below.

Page 17: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

letter Name of polyhedron

Number of faces

Number of edges

Number of vertices

A Triangular prism 5 9 6

B Triangular pyramid 4 6 4

C Square prism 6 12 8

D Pentagonal prism 7 15 10

E Hexagonal pyramid 7 12 7

F Octagonal prism 10 24 16

G Rectangular pyramid 5 8 5

H Septagonal prism 9 21 14n = # sides

on basePyramid / prism n + 1 / n + 2 2n / 3n n + 1 / 2n

Completed table:

Page 18: These are NOT polyhedron: These are polyhedron: Click here for more polyhedron Click here for more polyhedron Crystallographic polyhedra Create your

What is the relationship between the number of vertices, faces and edges in a polyhedron?

Click here for proofsof Euler’s formula

For any convex polyhedron, the number of vertices and faces together is exactly two more than the number of edges.

V + F = 2 + E

This is called Euler’s formula.

More Euler information