An ''n''-agonal 'bipyramid' or 'dipyramid' is a
polyhedron formed by joining an ''n''-agonal
pyramid and its
mirror image base-to-base.
The referenced n-agon in the name of the bipyramids is not an external face but an internal one, existing on the primary symmetry plane which connects the two pyramid halves.
The
face-transitive bipyramids are the
dual polyhedra of the
uniform prisms and will generally have
isosceles triangle faces.
Three bipyramids can be made out of all
equilateral triangles, the
octahedron (tetragonal bipyramid), which counts among the
Platonic solids, and the
triangular and
pentagonal bipyramids, which count among the
Johnson solids.
A bipyramid can be
projected on a sphere or
globe as ''n'' equally spaced lines of
longitude going from
pole to pole, and
bisected by a line around the
equator.
Bipyramid
faces, projected as
spherical triangles, represent the fundamental domains in the
dihedral symmetry D
nh.
Forms
#
Triangular bipyramid - 6 faces - dual
triangular prism
# ''Tetragonal bipyramid'' (
octahedron is a special case) - 8 faces - dual
cube
#
Pentagonal bipyramid - 10 faces - dual
pentagonal prism
#
Hexagonal bipyramid - 12 faces - dual
hexagonal prism
#
Heptagonal bipyramid - 14 faces - dual
heptagonal prism
#
Octagonal bipyramid - 16 faces - dual
octagonal prism
#
Enneagonal bipyramid - 18 faces - dual
enneagonal prism
#
Decagonal bipyramid - 20 faces - dual
decagonal prism
★ ...'n-agonal bipyramid' - 2n faces - dual 'n-agonal
prism'
Symmetry groups
If the base is regular and the line through the
apexes intersects the base at its center, the
symmetry group of the ''n''-agonal bipyramid has
dihedral symmetry ''D
nh'' of order 4''n'', except in the case of a regular octahedron, which has the larger
octahedral symmetry group 'O
h' of order 48, which has three versions of ''D
4h'' as subgroups.
The
rotation group is ''D
n'' of order 2''n'', except in the case of a regular octahedron, which has the larger symmetry group 'O' of order 24, which has three versions of ''D
4'' as subgroups.
External links
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The Uniform Polyhedra
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Virtual Reality Polyhedra The Encyclopedia of Polyhedra
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VRML models
(George Hart) <3> <4> <5> <6> <7> <8> <9> <10>
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Conway Notation for Polyhedra Try: "dP'n'", where 'n'=3,4,5,6... example "dP4" is an octahedron.