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Encyclopedia > Tetrahedral
Tetrahedron

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Click here for spinning version.
Type Platonic
Face polygon triangle
Faces 4
Edges 6
Vertices 4
Faces per vertex 3
Vertices per face 3
Symmetry group tetrahedral (Td)
Dual polyhedron tetrahedron (self-dual)
Dihedral Angle 70° 32'
Properties regular, convex

A tetrahedron (plural: tetrahedra) is a polyhedron composed of four triangular faces, three of which meet at each vertex. A regular tetrahedron is one in which the four triangles are regular, or "equilateral," and is one of the Platonic solids.


image:tetrahedron flat.png


The area A and the volume V of a regular tetrahedron of edge length a are:

A tetrahedron is a 3-simplex.


Tetrahedra are a special type of triangular pyramid and are self-dual. Canonical coordinates of the tetrahedron are (1, 1, 1), (−1, −1, 1), (−1, 1, −1) and (1, −1, −1). A regular tetrahedron can be embedded inside a cube in two ways such that each vertex is a vertex of the cube, and each edge is a diagonal of one of the cube's faces. The volume of this tetrahedron is 1/3 the volume of the cube. Taking both tetrahedra within a single cube gives a regular polyhedral compound called the stella octangula, whose interior is an octahedron. Inscribing tetrahedra inside the regular compound of five cubes gives two more regular compounds, containing five and ten tetrahedra.


Regular tetrahedra can't tile space by themselves, although it seems likely enough that Aristotle reported it was possible. In fact, octahedra are necessary to fill some of the gaps. This is one of the five Andreini tessellations, and is a limiting case of another, a tiling involving tetrahedra and truncated tetrahedra.


However, irregular tetrahedra can tile space by themselves. Complex shapes are often broken down into a mesh of irregular tetrahedra in preparation for finite element analysis.


The volume of an irregular tetrahedron, given its vertices a, b, c and d, is (1/6)·|det(ab, bc, cd)|, or any other combination of pairs of verticies that form a simply connected graph. (This works for regular tetrahedrons too.)


Especially in roleplaying, this solid is known as a d4, one of the more common Polyhedral dice.


Like all platonic solids, archimedean solids and indeed all convex polyhedra, a tetrahedron can be folded from a single sheet of paper.


See

External links

  • The Uniform Polyhedra (http://www.mathconsult.ch/showroom/unipoly/)
  • Virtual Reality Polyhedra (http://www.georgehart.com/virtual-polyhedra/vp.html) The Encyclopedia of Polyhedra
  • Paper Models of Polyhedra (http://www.korthalsaltes.com/) Many links

  Results from FactBites:
 
PlanetMath: tetrahedral number (241 words)
This means that tetrahedral numbers can be looked up in Pascal's triangle.
Tetrahedral numbers have practical applications in sphere packing.
This is version 3 of tetrahedral number, born on 2006-06-02, modified 2006-06-11.
Tetrahedral loose-fill packing - Patent 5213867 (4679 words)
Although tetrahedral containers, for liquids or other free-flowing products, especially food products, have been made of materials such as laminated paper, the advantages of the use of empty tetrahedral units, which can be formed of recycled material, as loose-fill packing, and which need not be sealed against the escape of contents, have not been recognized.
Special tetrahedral forms can be produced which are capable of filling a volume completely with no spaces between the tetrahedral units, but the present invention relates to loose-fill, where such tight nesting is not desired.
Tetrahedral loose-fill of the present invention can be made at the facilities of the loose-fill users, who need simply to store old magazines at their premises in their high density form until it is desired to convert the paper into packing material.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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