Rhombohedron

Polyhedron with six rhombi as faces From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In geometry, a rhombohedron (also called a rhombic hexahedron[1][2] or, inaccurately, a rhomboid[a]) is a special case of a parallelepiped in which all six faces are congruent rhombi.[3] It can be used to define the rhombohedral lattice system, a honeycomb with rhombohedral cells. A rhombohedron has two opposite apices at which all face angles are equal; a prolate rhombohedron has this common angle acute, and an oblate rhombohedron has an obtuse angle at these vertices. A cube is a special case of a rhombohedron with all sides square.

Rhombohedron
Rhombohedron
Typeprism
Faces6 rhombi
Edges12
Vertices8
Symmetry groupCi , [2+,2+], (×), order 2
Propertiesconvex, equilateral, zonohedron, parallelohedron

Special cases

The common angle at the two apices is here given as . There are two general forms of the rhombohedron: oblate (flattened) and prolate (stretched).

Oblate rhombohedron Prolate rhombohedron

In the oblate case and in the prolate case . For the figure is a cube.

Certain proportions of the rhombs give rise to some well-known special cases. These typically occur in both prolate and oblate forms.

More information ...
Form Cube √2 Rhombohedron Golden Rhombohedron
Angle
constraints
Ratio of diagonals 1 √2 Golden ratio
Occurrence Regular solid Dissection of the rhombic dodecahedron Dissection of the rhombic triacontahedron
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Solid geometry

For a unit (i.e.: with side length 1) rhombohedron,[4] with rhombic acute angle , with one vertex at the origin (0, 0, 0), and with one edge lying along the x-axis, the three generating vectors are

e1 :
e2 :
e3 :

The other coordinates can be obtained from vector addition[5] of the 3 direction vectors: e1 + e2 , e1 + e3 , e2 + e3 , and e1 + e2 + e3 .

The volume of a rhombohedron, in terms of its side length and its rhombic acute angle , is a simplification of the volume of a parallelepiped, and is given by

We can express the volume another way :

As the area of the (rhombic) base is given by , and as the height of a rhombohedron is given by its volume divided by the area of its base, the height of a rhombohedron in terms of its side length and its rhombic acute angle is given by

Note:

3 , where 3 is the third coordinate of e3 .

The body diagonal between the acute-angled vertices is the longest. By rotational symmetry about that diagonal, the other three body diagonals, between the three pairs of opposite obtuse-angled vertices, are all the same length.

Relation to orthocentric tetrahedra

Four points forming non-adjacent vertices of a rhombohedron necessarily form the four vertices of an orthocentric tetrahedron, and all orthocentric tetrahedra can be formed in this way.[6]

Rhombohedral lattice

The rhombohedral lattice system has rhombohedral cells, with 6 congruent rhombic faces forming a trigonal trapezohedron[citation needed]:

See also

Notes

  1. More accurately, rhomboid is a two-dimensional figure.

References

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