Diminished trapezohedron explained

Faces: kites
triangles
1
Dual:self-dual
Properties:convex

In geometry, a diminished trapezohedron is a polyhedron in an infinite set of polyhedra, constructed by removing one of the polar vertices of a trapezohedron and replacing it by a new face (diminishment). It has one regular base face, triangle faces around the base, and kites meeting on top. The kites can also be replaced by rhombi with specific proportions.

Along with the set of pyramids and elongated pyramids, these figures are topologically self-dual.

It can also be seen as an augmented antiprism, with a pyramid augmented onto one of the faces, and whose height is adjusted so the upper antiprism triangle faces can be made coparallel to the pyramid faces and merged into kite-shaped faces.

They're also related to the gyroelongated pyramids, as augmented antiprisms and which are Johnson solids for . This sequence has sets of two triangles instead of kite faces.

Examples

Diminished trapezohedra
SymmetryC3vC4vC5vC6vC7v C8v ...
Image
Rhombic
form
Net
Faces3 trapezoids
3+1 triangles
4 trapezoids
4 triangles
1 square
5 trapezoids
5 triangles
1 pentagon
6 trapezoids
6 triangles
1 hexagon
7 trapezoids
7 triangles
1 heptagon
8 trapezoids
7 triangles
1 octagon
Edges121620242832
Vertices7911131517
Trapezohedra
SymmetryD3dD4dD5dD6dD7dD8d
Image
3

4

5

6
Faces3+3 rhombi
(Or squares)
4+4 kites5+5 kites6+6 kites7+7 kites
Edges1216202428
Vertices810121416
Gyroelongated pyramid or (augmented antiprisms)
SymmetryC3vC4vC5vC6vC7vC8v
Image
3

5

6
Faces9+1 triangles12 triangles
1 squares
15 triangles
1 pentagon
18 triangles
1 hexagon

Special cases

There are three special case geometries of the diminished trigonal trapezohedron. The simplest is a diminished cube. The Chestahedron, named after artist Frank Chester, is constructed with equilateral triangles around the base, and the geometry adjusted so the kite faces have the same area as the equilateral triangles.[1] [2] The last can be seen by augmenting a regular tetrahedron and an octahedron, leaving 10 equilateral triangle faces, and then merging 3 sets of coparallel equilateral triangular faces into 3 (60 degree) rhombic faces. It can also be seen as a tetrahedron with 3 of 4 of its vertices rectified. The three rhombic faces fold out flat to form half of a hexagram.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chestahedron Geometry. The Art & Science of Frank Chester. en-US. 2020-01-22.
  2. Web site: Transforming a Tetrahedron into a Chestahedron. Donke. Hans-Joakim. March 2011. Wolfram Alpha. live. 22 January 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20141007023603/http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/TransformingATetrahedronIntoAChestahedron/ . 2014-10-07 .