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Triangular cupola

Cupola with hexagonal base

Triangular cupola

Summary

Cupola with hexagonal base

FieldValue
imagetriangular_cupola.png
typeJohnson
J*JJ*
faces4 triangles
3 squares
1 hexagon
edges15
vertices9
symmetryC_{3v}
vertex_config\begin{align}
propertiesconvex
netTriangular cupola (symmetric net).svg

JJJ 3 squares 1 hexagon &6 \times (3 \times 4 \times 6) , + \ &3 \times (3 \times 4 \times 3 \times 4) \end{align}

In geometry, the triangular cupola is the cupola with hexagon as its base and triangle as its top. If the edges are equal in length, the triangular cupola is the Johnson solid. It can be seen as half a cuboctahedron. The triangular cupola can be applied to construct many polyhedrons.

Properties

The triangular cupola has four triangles, three squares, and one hexagon as its faces; the hexagon is the base, and one of the four triangles is the top. If all of the edges are equal in length, the triangles and the hexagon becomes regular. The dihedral angle between each triangle and the hexagon is approximately 70.5°, that between each square and the hexagon is 54.7°, and that between square and triangle is 125.3°. A convex polyhedron in which all of the faces are regular is a Johnson solid, and the triangular cupola is among them, enumerated as the third Johnson solid J_{3} .

Given that a is the edge length of a triangular cupola. Its surface area A can be calculated by adding the area of four equilateral triangles, three squares, and one hexagon: A = \left(3+\frac{5\sqrt{3}}{2} \right) a^2 \approx 7.33a^2. Its height h and volume V is: \begin{align} h &= \frac{\sqrt{6}}{3} a\approx 0.82a, \ V &= \left(\frac{5}{3\sqrt{2}}\right)a^3 \approx 1.18a^3. \end{align}

3D model of a triangular cupola

It has an axis of symmetry passing through the center of its both top and base, which is symmetrical by rotating around it at one- and two-thirds of a full-turn angle. It is also mirror-symmetric relative to any perpendicular plane passing through a bisector of the hexagonal base. Therefore, it has pyramidal symmetry, the cyclic group C_{3\mathrm{v}} of order 6.

References

Wikipedia Source

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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