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Cubic pyramid

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4-D convex polytope
Cubic pyramid
Schlegel diagram
TypePolyhedral pyramid
Schläfli symbol( ) ∨ {4,3}
( ) ∨
( ) ∨
Cells1 {4,3}
6 ( ) ∨ {4}
Faces12 {3}
6 {4}
Edges20
Vertices9
Coxeter groupB3
Symmetry group, order 48
, order 16
, order 8
DualOctahedral pyramid
Propertiesconvex, regular-faced
Net

In 4-dimensional geometry, the cubic pyramid is bounded by one cube on the base and 6 square pyramid cells which meet at the apex. Since a cube has a circumradius divided by edge length less than one, the square pyramids can be made with regular faces by computing the appropriate height.

Images


3D projection while rotating

Related polytopes and honeycombs

Exactly 8 regular cubic pyramids will fit together around a vertex in four-dimensional space (the apex of each pyramid). This construction yields a tesseract with 8 cubical bounding cells, surrounding a central vertex with 16 edge-length long radii. The tesseract tessellates 4-dimensional space as the tesseractic honeycomb. The 4-dimensional content of a unit-edge-length tesseract is 1, so the content of the regular cubic pyramid is 1/8.

The regular 24-cell has cubic pyramids around every vertex. Placing 8 cubic pyramids on the cubic bounding cells of a tesseract is Gosset's construction of the 24-cell. Thus the 24-cell is constructed from exactly 16 cubic pyramids. The 24-cell tessellates 4-dimensional space as the 24-cell honeycomb.

The dual to the cubic pyramid is an octahedral pyramid, seen as an octahedral base, and 8 regular tetrahedra meeting at an apex.

A cubic pyramid of height zero can be seen as a cube divided into 6 square pyramids along with the center point. These square pyramid-filled cubes can tessellate three-dimensional space as a dual of the truncated cubic honeycomb, called a hexakis cubic honeycomb, or pyramidille.

The cubic pyramid can be folded from a three-dimensional net in the form of a non-convex tetrakis hexahedron, obtained by gluing square pyramids onto the faces of a cube, and folded along the squares where the pyramids meet the cube.

References

  1. Klitzing, Richard. "3D convex uniform polyhedra o3o4x - cube". sqrt(3)/2 = 0.866025
  2. Coxeter, H.S.M. (1973). Regular Polytopes (Third ed.). New York: Dover. p. 150.

External links

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