Augmented sphenocorona

1

In geometry, the augmented sphenocorona is the Johnson solid that can be constructed by attaching an equilateral square pyramid to one of the square faces of the sphenocorona. It is the only Johnson solid arising from "cut and paste" manipulations where the components are not all prisms, antiprisms or sections of Platonic or Archimedean solids.

Construction

The augmented sphenocorona is constructed by attaching equilateral square pyramid to the sphenocorona, a process known as the augmentation. This pyramid covers one square face of the sphenocorona, replacing them with equilateral triangles. As a result, the augmented sphenocorona has 16 equilateral triangles and 1 square as its faces. The convex polyhedron with its faces are regular is the Johnson solid; the augmented sphenocorona is one of them, enumerated as J_{87}, the 87th Johnson solid.

Properties

For the edge length a, the surface area of an augmented sphenocorona is by summing the area of 16 equilateral triangles and 1 square: Its volume can be calculated by slicing it into a sphenocorona and an equilateral square pyramid, and adding the volume subsequently:

This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.

Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the Wikimedia Foundation.

View original