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Polyhedron
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===Duality=== {{main|Dual polyhedron}} [[File:Dual Cube-Octahedron.svg|thumb|180px|The octahedron is dual to the cube]] For every convex polyhedron, there exists a dual polyhedron having * faces in place of the original's vertices and vice versa, and * the same number of edges. The dual of a convex polyhedron can be obtained by the process of [[Dual polyhedron#Polar reciprocation|polar reciprocation]].<ref>{{citation | last1 = Cundy | first1 = H. Martyn | author1-link = Martyn Cundy | last2 = Rollett | first2 = A.P. | edition = 2nd | location = Oxford | mr = 0124167 | publisher = Clarendon Press | title = Mathematical models | title-link = Mathematical Models (Cundy and Rollett) | year = 1961 | contribution = 3.2 Duality | pages = 78–79}}.<!-- Describes only duality by polar reciprocation through the midsphere --></ref> Dual polyhedra exist in pairs, and the dual of a dual is just the original polyhedron again. Some polyhedra are self-dual, meaning that the dual of the polyhedron is congruent to the original polyhedron.<ref>{{citation | last1 = Grünbaum | first1 = B. | author1-link = Branko Grünbaum | last2 = Shephard | first2 = G.C. | author2-link = Geoffrey Colin Shephard | doi = 10.1112/blms/1.3.257 | journal = [[Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society]] | mr = 0250188 | pages = 257–300 | title = Convex polytopes | url = http://www.wias-berlin.de/people/si/course/files/convex_polytopes-survey-Gruenbaum.pdf | volume = 1 | issue = 3 | year = 1969 | access-date = 2017-02-21 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170222114014/http://www.wias-berlin.de/people/si/course/files/convex_polytopes-survey-Gruenbaum.pdf | archive-date = 2017-02-22 }}. See in particular the bottom of page 260.</ref> Abstract polyhedra also have duals, obtained by reversing the [[partial order]] defining the polyhedron to obtain its [[Duality (order theory)|dual or opposite order]].<ref name=grunbaum-same/> These have the same Euler characteristic and orientability as the initial polyhedron. However, this form of duality does not describe the shape of a dual polyhedron, but only its combinatorial structure. For some definitions of non-convex geometric polyhedra, there exist polyhedra whose abstract duals cannot be realized as geometric polyhedra under the same definition.<ref name=acoptic/>
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