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Tetrahedron

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A rotating tetrahedron

A tetrahedron or triangular pyramid is a polyhedron (a three-dimensional shape). It has four corners and six edges. All four of its faces are equilateral triangles. Every two edges meet on one of those corners forming a sixty-degree angle.

Formulas for a regular tetrahedron

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A regular tetrahedron is a tetrahedron whose edges are the same length. If the length of an edge is a:

Surface area[1]
Face area
Height[2] and
Volume[1] and

Other properties

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A regular tetrahedron's faces are all the same, and so are all its edges, as well as its corners. This makes it a regular polyhedron. It is also convex (its faces do not go through one another), which makes it a Platonic solid.

The dual of regular tetrahedron is another regular tetrahedron. This is called being self-dual.

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 Coxeter, Harold Scott MacDonald; Regular Polytopes, Methuen and Co., 1948, Table I(i)
  2. Köller, Jürgen, "Tetrahedron", Mathematische Basteleien, 2001