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Friday, June 25, 2010

Let's learn

Polyhedron

A polyhedron is a solid with flat faces (from Greek poly- meaning "many" and -edron meaning "face").

Each flat surface (or "face") is a polygon.

So, to be a polyhedron there should be no curved surfaces.

Examples of Polyhedra:

Triangular Prism Cube Dodecahedron

Common Polyhedra

Platonic Solids
Prisms
Pyramids

Counting Faces, Vertices and Edges

If you count the number of faces (the flat surfaces), vertices (corner points), and edges of a polyhedron, you can discover an interesting thing:

The number of faces plus the number of vertices minus the number of edges equals 2

This can be written neatly as a little equation:

F + V - E = 2

It is known as the "Polyhedral Formula", and is very useful to make sure you have counted correctly!

Let's try some examples:

This cube has:
  • 6 Faces
  • 8 Vertices (corner points)
  • 12 Edges
F + V - E = 6+8-12 = 2

This prism has:
  • 5 Faces
  • 6 Vertices (corner points)
  • 9 Edges

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