Oct 27, 2009 ... A general dodecahedron is a polyhedron having 12 faces. Examples include the decagonal prism, elongated square dipyramid (Johnson solid ...
|
mathworld.wolfram.com/Dodecahedron.html
mathworld.wolfram.com/Dodecahedron.html
|
|
Rhombic dodecahedron - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
|
In geometry, the rhombic dodecahedron is a convex polyhedron with 12 rhombic faces. It is an Archimedean dual solid, or a Catalan solid. Its dual is the cuboctahedron. It is the polyhedral dual of t...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhombic_dodecahedron
|
|
|
|
|
Images and geometric data of the uniform polyhedron No. 23, the dodecahedron. ... Wythoff Symbol: 3|2 5 ... ray traced image of the dodecahedron (23)
|
www.mathconsult.ch/showroom/unipoly/23.html
|
|
|
|
Dodecahedron Facts ... ; It is called a dodecahedron because it is a polyhedron that has 12 faces (from Greek dodeca- meaning 12). ... If you have more than one dodecahedron they are called dodecahedra;
|
www.mathsisfun.com/geometry/dodecahedron.html
www.mathsisfun.com/geometry/dodecahedron.html
|
|
|
|
Calendar on a regular dodecahedron ... I have reused Andrew Rogers' calendar generator, so you can get calendars on Nick Robinson's rhombic A4 units, and make a rhombic dodecahedron calendar. This variant is made without glue.
|
www.ii.uib.no/~arntzen/kalender/
|
|
|
The Rhombic Dodecahedron and its relationship to the 4-dimensional hypercube. ... The faces of the rhombic dodecahedron are all identical rhombuses (a rhombus is a parallelogram with all edges equal, i.e. a squashed square). It is not considered a "regular" polyhedron because the vertices are not all the same.
|
dogfeathers.com/mark/rhdodec.html
|
|
Free paper models: Platonic solids, Archimedean solids and many other polyhedra> Paper Models of Polyhedra ... Examples: Icosahedron; Truncated Icosahedron (soccerball); Small Stellated Dodecahedron; Small Ditrigonal Icosidodecahedron; Compound of Cube and Octahedron; Pyramid; Pentagonal Hexecontahedron;
|
Manipulating the shapes on this page. ... Pentagons. As in the case of cubes, the only possibility is that three pentagons meet at a vertex. This gives rise to a Dodecahedron.
|
www.math.utah.edu/~alfeld/math/polyhedra/polyhedra.html
|
|