| Set of pyramids | |
|---|---|
| Faces | n triangles, 1 n-agon |
| Edges | 2n |
| Vertices | n+1 |
| Symmetry group | Cnv |
| Dual polyhedron | Self-duals |
| Properties | convex |
When unspecified the base is usually assumed to be square. For a triangular pyramid each face can serve as base, with the opposite vertex as apex. One of the Platonic solids, the tetrahedron, is a triangular pyramid. The square and pentagonal pyramids can also be constructed with all faces regular, and so count among the Johnson solids. All pyramids are self-dual.
Pyramids are a subclass of the prismatoids.
The volume of a pyramid is where A is the area of the base and h the height from the base to the apex. This works for any location of the apex, provided that h is measured as the perpendicular distance from the plane which contains the base.
| Name | Tetrahedron | Square pyramid | Pentagonal pyramid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class | Platonic solid | Johnson solid (J1) | Johnson solid (J2) |
| Base | equilaterial triangle | Square | regular pentagon |
| Symmetry group | Td | C4v | C5v |
The geometric center of a square-based pyramid is located on the symmetry axis, one quarter of the way from the base to the apex.
Polyhedra | Self-dual polyhedra | Prismatoid polyhedra | Pyramids | Pyramids and bipyramids
Jehlan | Пирамида | Jehlan | Pyramide (Geometrie) | Pirámide (geometría) | pyramide | פירמידה (גאומטריה) | Piramide (geometria) | 角錐 | Piramide (ruimtelijk figuur) | Pyramide | Ostrosłup | Pirâmide | Pyramidi (geometria) | Piramit
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Pyramid (geometry)".
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