Dodecagonal prism
In geometry, the dodecagonal prism is the tenth in an infinite set of prisms, formed by square sides and two regular dodecagon caps.
Uniform dodecagonal prism | |
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Type | Prismatic uniform polyhedron |
Elements | F = 14, E = 36, V = 24 (χ = 2) |
Faces by sides | 12{4}+2{12} |
Schläfli symbol | t{2,12} or {12}×{} |
Wythoff symbol | 2 2 2 6 | |
Coxeter diagrams | |
Symmetry | D12h, [12,2], (*12.2.2), order 48 |
Rotation group | D12, [12,2]+, (12.2.2), order 24 |
References | U76(j) |
Dual | Dodecagonal dipyramid |
Properties | convex, zonohedron |
Vertex figure 4.4.12 |
If faces are all regular, it is a uniform polyhedron.
Use
It is used in the construction of two prismatic uniform honeycombs:
Omnitruncated triangular-hexagonal prismatic honeycomb |
Truncated hexagonal prismatic honeycomb |
The new British one pound (£1) coin, which entered circulation in March 2017, is shaped like a dodecagonal prism.[1]
Related polyhedra
Family of uniform prisms | |||||||||||
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Polyhedron | |||||||||||
Coxeter | |||||||||||
Tiling | |||||||||||
Config. | 2.4.4 | 3.4.4 | 4.4.4 | 5.4.4 | 6.4.4 | 7.4.4 | 8.4.4 | 9.4.4 | 10.4.4 | 11.4.4 | 12.4.4 |
References
- "New 12-sided pound coin to enter circulation in March". BBC News. 2017-01-01. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
External links
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