Search Results for ""
1 - 10 of 196 for Octahedron StellationSearch Results
Using either the fully supported or Miller's rules criterion (Webb), the octahedron has two reflexible stellations: the octahedron itself and the stella octangula.
A (general) octahedron is a polyhedron having eight faces. Examples include the 4-trapezohedron, augmented triangular prism (Johnson solid J_(49)), bislit cube, Dürer solid, ...
Stellation is the process of constructing polyhedra by extending the facial planes past the polyhedron edges of a given polyhedron until they intersect (Wenninger 1989). The ...
The regular octahedron, often simply called "the" octahedron, is the Platonic solid with six polyhedron vertices, 12 polyhedron edges, and eight equivalent equilateral ...
R. Whorf found that there are probably several thousand stellations of the small triakis octahedron (Wenninger 1983, p. 36). In particular, the convex hulls of the great ...
The cube-octahedron 20-compounds are polyhedron compounds of the cube 20-compound and its dual, the octahedron 20-compound.
A chamfered octahedron, which could also know known as a tritruncated rhombic dodecahedron, is a polyhedron obtained by chamfering a regular octahedron. The illustration ...
There are a number of attractive polyhedron compounds consisting of five octahedra. The first octahedron 5-compound is a polyhedron compound composed of five octahedra ...
In general, a triakis octahedron is a non-regular icositetrahedron that can be constructed as a positive augmentation of regular octahedron. Such a solid is also known as a ...
The cube-octahedron 5-compound is a polyhedron compound of the cube 5-compound and its dual, the octahedron 5-compound. It will be implemented in a future version of the ...
...
View search results from all Wolfram sites (484 matches)