|
HEBESPHENOMEGACORONA/ˈhɛbɪsfɪːəʊmɛɡəkərəʊnə/ An irregular solid figure with 21 faces, 18 of them triangular and the other three square. We’re into one of the more arcane areas of three-dimensional geometry here. This figure is a polyhedron, a solid figure with flat faces. It was given this name in 1969 by Viktor Zalgaller, in an article in which he proved an abstruse result about a set of irregular polyhedra called the Johnson solids. [Many thanks to Eric Weisstein for permission to reproduce the image. Pictures of all the Johnson solids are online, but be prepared for a wait while 92 images download.] SHARE THIS ARTICLE |
Page created 24 Oct 1998
Last updated 26 Mar 2005 News
22 Nov. Links to several social network sites have been added to every content page.
22 Nov. Some review pages for books that are now out of print have been removed.
23 Oct. This site’s newsletter has been nominated for the Lsoft Choice Awards. Please vote.
29 Sep. Affixes.org, our new site, has 1,250 entries on the building blocks of English.
Most visited pages
Random selections
|