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Rectangular cuboid
Cuboid with all right angles and equal opposite faces
Cuboid with all right angles and equal opposite faces
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Rectangular cuboid |
| image | Cuboid no label.svg |
| type | Prism |
| Plesiohedron | |
| faces | 6 rectangles |
| edges | 12 |
| vertices | 8 |
| symmetry group | *D*2h |
| properties | convex, |
| zonohedron, | |
| isogonal |
Plesiohedron zonohedron, isogonal
A rectangular cuboid is a special case of a cuboid with rectangular faces in which all of its dihedral angles are right angles. This shape is also called rectangular parallelepiped or orthogonal parallelepiped.
Many writers just call these "cuboids", without qualifying them as being rectangular, but others use cuboid to refer to a more general class of polyhedra with six quadrilateral faces.
Properties
A rectangular cuboid is a convex polyhedron with six rectangle faces. The dihedral angles of a rectangular cuboid are all right angles, and its opposite faces are congruent.{{multiref | | Because of the faces' orthogonality, the rectangular cuboid is classified as convex orthogonal polyhedron. By definition, this makes it a right rectangular prism. Rectangular cuboids may be referred to colloquially as "boxes" (after the physical object). If two opposite faces become squares, the resulting one may obtain another special case of rectangular prism, known as square rectangular cuboid. They can be represented as the prism graph \Pi_4 . In the case that all six faces are squares, the result is a cube.
If a rectangular cuboid has length a , width b , and height c , then:{{multiref | |
- its volume is the product of the rectangular area and its height: V=abc.
- its surface area is the sum of the area of all faces: A=2(ab+ac+bc).
- its space diagonal can be found by constructing a right triangle of height c with its base as the diagonal of the rectangular face, then calculating the hypotenuse's length using the Pythagorean theorem: d=\sqrt{a^2 + b^2 + c^2}.
Appearance
Rectangular cuboid shapes are often used for boxes, cupboards, rooms, buildings, containers, cabinets, books, sturdy computer chassis, printing devices, electronic calling touchscreen devices, washing and drying machines, etc. They are among those solids that can tessellate three-dimensional space. The shape is fairly versatile in being able to contain multiple smaller rectangular cuboids, e.g. sugar cubes in a box, boxes in a cupboard, cupboards in a room, and rooms in a building.
American psychologist Joy Paul Guilford modelled a three-dimensional 5×4×6 cube, called "Guilford's cube", displaying 120 possible ways of thinking apropos of the intelligence structure. Each dimension represents the mental factors, which includes five operations (cognition, memory, convergent thinking, divergent thinking, and evaluation); four contents (figural, symbolic, semantic, and behavioral); and six products (units, classes, relations, systems, transformations, and implications). An extension into a 5×5×6 cube by adding two-factor contents, which replace figural with visual and auditory, yielding 150 possible ways.{{cite web
References
Notes
Citations
Bibliographies
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- {{cite book | editor-last1 = Lee | editor-first1 = Clare | editor-last2 = Johnston-Wilder | editor-first2 = Sue | editor-last3 = Ward-Penny | editor-first3 = Robert
References
- Steward, Don. (May 24, 2013). "nets of a cuboid".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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