Title: Polyhedrons or Polyhedra
1Polyhedrons or Polyhedra
- A polyhedron is a solid formed by flat surfaces.
- We are going to look at regular convex
polyhedrons - regular refers to the fact that every face,
every edge length, every facial angle, and every
dihedral angle (angle between two faces) are
equal to all the others that constitute the
polyhedron. - convex refers to the fact that all of the sides
of the shapes are flat planes, i.e., they are not
concave, or dented in.Â
2Characteristics of Regular Convex Polyhedra
- Each face is congruent to all others
- Each face is regular
- Each face meets the others in exactly the same
way  - So how many regular polyhedra are there?
3The History of the Platonic Solids
4Video
- Pull out your video chart quiz and fill it in as
the video is played. - The answers will not be as obvious as our last
videos, so pay attention! - You will need this information for your quiz on
Friday!
5A History of Platonic Solids
- There are five regular polyhedra that were
discovered by the ancient Greeks. - The Pythagoreans knew of the tetrahedron, the
cube, and the dodecahedron the mathematician
Theaetetus added the octahedron and the
icosahedron.
6These shapes are called the Platonic solids,
after the ancient Greek philosopher Plato Plato,
who greatly respected Theaetetus' work,
speculated that these five solids were the shapes
of the fundamental components of the physical
universe
7Tetrahedron
The tetrahedron is bounded by four equilateral
triangles. It has the smallest volume for its
surface and represents the property of dryness.
It corresponds to fire.
8Hexahedron
- The hexahedron is bounded by six squares. The
hexahedron, standing firmly on its base,
corresponds to the stable earth.
9Octahedron
- The octahedron is bounded by eight equilateral
triangles. It rotates freely when held by two
opposite vertices and corresponds to air.
10Dodecahedron
- The dodecahedron is bounded by twelve equilateral
pentagons. It corresponds to the universe because
the zodiac has twelve signs corresponding to the
twelve faces of the dodecahedron.
11Icosahedron
- The icosahedron is bounded by twenty equilateral
triangles. It has the largest volume for its
surface area and represents the property of
wetness. The icosahedron corresponds to water.
12The Archimedean Solids April 7, 2003
13The 13 Archimedean Solids
- All these solids were described by Archimedes,
although, his original writings on the topic were
lost and only known of second-hand. Various
artists gradually rediscovered all but one of
these polyhedra during the Renaissance, and
Johannes Kepler finally reconstructed the entire
set.
- A key characteristic of the Archimedean
solids is that each face is a regular polygon,
and around every vertex, the same polygons appear
in the same sequence, e.g., hexagon-hexagon-triang
le in the truncated tetrahedron. Two or more
different polygons appear in each of the
Archimedean solids, unlike the Platonic solids
which each contain only a single type of polygon.
The polyhedron is required to be convex.
14 Truncated Tetrahedron Truncated Octahedron
Truncated Cube Cuboctahedron Great
Rhombicuboctahedron Small Rhombicuboctahedron
Snub Cube Truncated Icosahedron Truncated
Dodecahedron Icosidodecahedron Great
Rhombicosidodecahedron Small Rhombicosidodecahedr
on Snub Dodecahedron
15Truncated Polyhedrons
- The term truncated refers to the process of
cutting off corners. Truncation adds a new face
for each previously existing vertex, and replaces
n-gons with 2n-gons, e.g., octagons instead of
squares.Â
cube
truncated cube
16Snub Polyhedrons
- The term snub can refer to a process of replacing
each edge with a pair of triangles, e.g., as a
way of deriving what is usually called the snub
cube from the cube. The 6 square faces of the
cube remain squares (but rotated slightly), the
12 edges become 24 triangles, and the 8 vertices
become an additional 8 triangles.
17April Project
- http//www.scienceu.com/geometry/classroom/buildic
osa/index.html - This is the website that contains directions to
your April Project Building an Icosahedron. - Your group is going to build one big Platonic
solid, the icosahedron. - You will have two class periods to work together.
- This project is due April 30th.