Augmented truncated tetrahedron
In geometry, the augmented truncated tetrahedron is a polyhedron constructed by attaching a triangular cupola onto an truncated tetrahedron. It is an example of a Johnson solid. ConstructionThe augmented truncated tetrahedron is constructed from a truncated tetrahedron by attaching a triangular cupola.[1] This cupola covers one of the truncated tetrahedron's four hexagonal faces, so that the resulting polyhedron's faces are eight equilateral triangles, three squares, and three regular hexagons.[2] Since it has the property of convexity and has regular polygonal faces, the augmented truncated tetrahedron is a Johnson solid, denoted as the sixty-fifth Johnson solid .[3] PropertiesThe surface area of an augmented truncated tetrahedron is:[2] the sum of the areas of its faces. Its volume can be calculated by slicing it off into both truncated tetrahedron and triangular cupola, and adding their volume:[2] It has the same three-dimensional symmetry group as the triangular cupola, the pyramidal symmetry . Its dihedral angles can be obtained by adding the angle of a triangular cupola and an augmented truncated tetrahedron in the following:[4]
References
External links
Information related to Augmented truncated tetrahedron |