Pyramid
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A pyramid is a polyhedron with one face (known as the "base") a polygon and all the other faces
triangles meeting at a common polygon
vertex (known as the "apex"). A right pyramid is a pyramid for which
the line joining the centroid of the base and the apex is perpendicular to the base.
A regular pyramid is a right pyramid whose base
is a regular polygon. An
-gonal regular pyramid
(denoted
) having equilateral
triangles as sides is possible only for
, 4, 5. These
correspond to the tetrahedron, square
pyramid, and pentagonal pyramid, respectively.
A pyramid is self-dual, corresponding to the fact that a pyramid's skeleton (a wheel graph) is a self-dual graph.
An arbitrary pyramid has a single cross-sectional shape whose lengths scale linearly with height. Therefore, the area of a cross
section scales quadratically with height, decreasing from
at the base
(
) to 0 at the apex (assumed to lie at a height
). The area at a height
above the base is therefore given by
|
(1)
|
As a result, the volume of a pyramid, regardless of base shape or position of the apex relative to the base, is given by
|
(2)
| |||
|
(3)
| |||
|
(4)
|
Note that this formula also holds for the cone, elliptic cone, etc.
The volume of a pyramid whose base is a regular
-sided polygon with side
is therefore
|
(5)
|
Expressing in terms of the circumradius of the base gives
|
(6)
|
(Lo Bello 1988, Gearhart and Schulz 1990).
The geometric centroid is the same as for the cone, given by
|
(7)
|
The lateral surface area of a pyramid is
|
(8)
|
where
is the slant height
and
is the base perimeter.
Joining two pyramids together at their bases gives a dipyramid, also called a bipyramid.




pyramid




