Heptagonal bipyramid
Typebipyramid
Faces14 triangles
Edges21
Vertices9
Schläfli symbol{ } + {7}
Coxeter diagram
Symmetry groupD7h, [7,2], (*227), order 28
Rotation groupD7, [7,2]+, (227), order 14
Dual polyhedronheptagonal prism
Face configurationV4.4.7
Propertiesconvex, face-transitive

The heptagonal bipyramid is one of the infinite set of bipyramids, dual to the infinite prisms. If an heptagonal bipyramid is to be face-transitive, all faces must be isosceles triangles. The resulting solid has 14 triangular faces, 9 vertices and 21 edges.[1][2]

"Regular" right (symmetric) n-gonal bipyramids:
Bipyramid name Digonal bipyramid Triangular bipyramid
(See: J12)
Square bipyramid
(See: O)
Pentagonal bipyramid
(See: J13)
Hexagonal bipyramid Heptagonal bipyramid Octagonal bipyramid Enneagonal bipyramid Decagonal bipyramid ... Apeirogonal bipyramid
Polyhedron image ...
Spherical tiling image Plane tiling image
Face config. V2.4.4V3.4.4V4.4.4V5.4.4V6.4.4V7.4.4V8.4.4V9.4.4V10.4.4...V∞.4.4
Coxeter diagram ...

References

  1. Heptagonal Dipyramid dmccooey.com [2014-6-23]
  2. Pugh, Anthony (1976), Polyhedra: A Visual Approach, University of California Press, pp. 21, 27, 62, ISBN 9780520030565.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.