Pentagonal gyrobicupola
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| Pentagonal gyrobicupola | |
|---|---|
| Type | Bicupola, Johnson J30 – J31 – J32 |
| Faces | 10 triangles 10 squares 2 pentagons |
| Edges | 40 |
| Vertices | 20 |
| Vertex configuration | |
| Symmetry group | |
| Properties | convex, composite |
| Net | |
The pentagonal gyrobicupola is a polyhedron that is constructed by attaching two pentagonal cupolas base-to-base, each of its cupolas is twisted at 36°. It is an example of a Johnson solid and a composite polyhedron.
The pentagonal gyrobicupola is a composite polyhedron: it is constructed by attaching two pentagonal cupolas base-to-base. This construction is similar to the pentagonal orthobicupola; the difference is that one of the cupolas in the pentagonal gyrobicupola is twisted at 36°, as suggested by the prefix gyro-. The resulting polyhedron has the same faces as the pentagonal orthobicupola does: those cupolas cover their decagonal bases, replacing them with ten equilateral triangles, ten squares, and two regular pentagons.[1] A convex polyhedron in which all of its faces are regular polygons is the Johnson solid. The pentagonal gyrobicupola has these, enumerating it as the thirty-first Johnson solid .[2]
