Template:Short description A hexahedron (Template:Plural form: hexahedra or hexahedrons) or sexahedron (Template:Plural form: sexahedra or sexahedrons) is any polyhedron with six faces. A cube, for example, is a regular hexahedron with all its faces square, and three squares around each vertex.

There are seven topologically distinct convex hexahedra,<ref name=dillencourt>Template:Citation</ref> one of which exists in two mirror image forms. Additional non-convex hexahedra exist, with their number depending on how polyhedra are defined. Two polyhedra are "topologically distinct" if they have intrinsically different arrangements of faces and vertices, such that it is impossible to distort one into the other simply by changing the lengths of edges or the angles between edges or faces.

ConvexEdit

CuboidEdit

A hexahedron that is combinatorially equivalent to a cube may be called a cuboid, although this term is often used more specifically to mean a rectangular cuboid, a hexahedron with six rectangular sides. Different types of cuboids include the ones depicted and linked below.

Cuboids
File:Hexahedron.png File:Cuboid no label.svg File:Trigonal trapezohedron.png File:Trigonal trapezohedron gyro-side.png File:Usech kvadrat piramid.png File:Parallelepiped 2013-11-29.svg File:Rhombohedron.svg
Cube
(square)
Rectangular cuboid
(three pairs of
rectangles)
Trigonal trapezohedron
(congruent rhombi)
Trigonal trapezohedron
(congruent quadrilaterals)
Quadrilateral frustum
(apex-truncated
square pyramid)
Parallelepiped
(three pairs of
parallelograms)
Rhombohedron
(three pairs of
rhombi)

OthersEdit

There are seven topologically distinct convex hexahedra,<ref name=dillencourt/> the cuboid and six others, which are depicted below. One of these is chiral, in the sense that it cannot be deformed into its mirror image.

Image File:Hexahedron5.svg File:Hexahedron7.svgFile:Hexahedron7a.svg File:Hexahedron2.svg File:Hexahedron6.svg File:Hexahedron3.svg File:Hexahedron4.svg
Name Triangular bipyramid Pentagonal pyramid Doubly truncated tetrahedron<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Features Template:Plainlist Template:Plainlist Template:Plainlist Template:Plainlist Template:Plainlist Template:Plainlist
Properties Simplicial Template:Plainlist Template:Plainlist Dome Template:Plainlist

ConcaveEdit

Three further topologically distinct hexahedra can only be realised as concave acoptic polyhedra. These are defined as the surfaces formed by non-crossing simple polygon faces, with each edge shared by exactly two faces and each vertex surrounded by a cycle of three or more faces.<ref>Template:Citation; for the three non-convex acoptic hexahedra see p. 7 of the preprint version and Fig. 3, p. 30</ref>

Concave
File:Hexahedron8.svg File:Hexahedron10.svg File:Hexahedron9.svg
4.4.3.3.3.3 Faces
10 E, 6 V
5.5.3.3.3.3 Faces
11 E, 7 V
6.6.3.3.3.3 Faces
12 E, 8 V

These cannot be convex because they do not meet the conditions of Steinitz's theorem, which states that convex polyhedra have vertices and edges that form 3-vertex-connected graphs.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> For other types of polyhedra that allow faces that are not simple polygons, such as the spherical polyhedra of Hong and Nagamochi, more possibilities exist.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

ReferencesEdit

<references/>


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