Disphenocingulum

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox polyhedron File:J90 disphenocingulum.stl

In geometry, the disphenocingulum is a Johnson solid with 20 equilateral triangles and 4 squares as its faces.

Properties

The disphenocingulum is named by Template:Harvtxt. The prefix dispheno- refers to two wedgelike complexes, each formed by two adjacent lunes—a figure of two equilateral triangles at the opposite sides of a square. The suffix -cingulum, literally 'belt', refers to a band of 12 triangles joining the two wedges.Template:R The resulting polyhedron has 20 equilateral triangles and 4 squares, making 24 faces.Template:R. All of the faces are regular, categorizing the disphenocingulum as a Johnson solid—a convex polyhedron in which all of its faces are regular polygon—enumerated as 90th Johnson solid J90.Template:R. It is an elementary polyhedron, meaning that it cannot be separated by a plane into two small regular-faced polyhedra.Template:R

The surface area of a disphenocingulum with edge length a can be determined by adding all of its faces, the area of 20 equilateral triangles and 4 squares (4+53)a212.6603a2, and its volume is 3.7776a3.Template:R

Cartesian coordinates

Let a0.76713 be the second smallest positive root of the polynomial 256x12512x111664x10+3712x9+1552x86592x7+1248x6+4352x52024x4944x3+672x224x23 and h=2+8a8a2 and c=1a2. Then, the Cartesian coordinates of a disphenocingulum with edge length 2 are given by the union of the orbits of the points (1,2a,h2), (1,0,2c+h2), (1+34a2c,0,2c1c+h2) under the action of the group generated by reflections about the xz-plane and the yz-plane.Template:R

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Johnson solids navigator