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Pyramid (geometry)

In geometry, a pyramid (from Ancient Greek πυραμίς (puramís))[2][3] is a polyhedron formed by connecting a polygonal base and a point, called the apex. Each base edge and apex form a triangle, called a lateral face. It is a conic solid with polygonal base. A pyramid with an n-sided base has n + 1 vertices, n + 1 faces, and 2n edges. All pyramids are self-dual.

Regular-based right pyramids
Facesn triangles
1 n-sided polygon
Edges2n
Verticesn + 1
Schläfli symbol( ) ∨ {n}
Conway notationYn
Symmetry groupCnv, [1,n], (*nn), order 2n
Rotation groupCn, [1,n]+, (nn), order n
Dual polyhedronself-dual
Propertiesconvex
The 1-skeleton of pyramid is a wheel graph[1]

Terminology edit

A right pyramid has its apex directly above the centroid of its base. Nonright pyramids are called oblique pyramids. A regular pyramid has a regular polygon base and is usually implied to be a right pyramid.[4][5]

When unspecified, a pyramid is usually assumed to be a regular square pyramid, like the physical pyramid structures. A triangle-based pyramid is more often called a tetrahedron.

Among oblique pyramids, like acute and obtuse triangles, a pyramid can be called acute if its apex is above the interior of the base and obtuse if its apex is above the exterior of the base. A right-angled pyramid has its apex above an edge or vertex of the base. In a tetrahedron these qualifiers change based on which face is considered the base.

Pyramids are a class of the prismatoids. Pyramids can be doubled into bipyramids by adding a second offset point on the other side of the base plane.

 
A pyramid truncated by an inclined plane

A pyramid cut off by a plane is called a truncated pyramid; if the truncation plane is parallel to the pyramid's base, it is called a frustum.

Right pyramids with a regular base edit

A right pyramid with a regular base has isosceles triangle sides, with symmetry is Cnv or [1,n], with order 2n. It can be given an extended Schläfli symbol ( ) ∨ {n}, representing a point, ( ), joined (orthogonally offset) to a regular polygon, {n}. A join operation creates a new edge between all pairs of vertices of the two joined figures.[6]

The trigonal or triangular pyramid with all equilateral triangle faces becomes the regular tetrahedron, one of the Platonic solids. A lower symmetry case of the triangular pyramid is C3v, which has an equilateral triangle base, and 3 identical isosceles triangle sides. The square and pentagonal pyramids can also be composed of regular convex polygons, in which case they are Johnson solids.

If all edges of a square pyramid (or any convex polyhedron) are tangent to a sphere so that the average position of the tangential points are at the center of the sphere, then the pyramid is said to be canonical, and it forms half of a regular octahedron.

Pyramids with a hexagon or higher base must be composed of isosceles triangles. A hexagonal pyramid with equilateral triangles would be a completely flat figure, and a heptagonal or higher would have the triangles not meet at all.

Regular pyramids
Digonal Triangular Square Pentagonal Hexagonal Heptagonal Octagonal Enneagonal Decagonal...
Improper Regular Equilateral Isosceles
                 
                 

Right star pyramids edit

Right pyramids with regular star polygon bases are called star pyramids.[7] For example, the pentagrammic pyramid has a pentagram base and 5 intersecting triangle sides.

 

Right pyramids with an irregular base edit

 
Example general right pyramid with apex above the centroid of a base polygon

A right pyramid can be named as ( )∨P, where ( ) is the apex point, ∨ is a join operator, and P is a base polygon.

An isosceles triangle right tetrahedron can be written as ( )∨[( )∨{ }] as the join of a point to an isosceles triangle base, as [( )∨( )]∨{ } or { }∨{ } as the join (orthogonal offsets) of two orthogonal segments, a digonal disphenoid, containing 4 isosceles triangle faces. It has C1v symmetry from two different base-apex orientations, and C2v in its full symmetry.

A rectangular right pyramid, written as ( )∨[{ }×{ }], and a rhombic pyramid, as ( )∨[{ }+{ }], both have symmetry C2v.

Right pyramids
   
Rectangular pyramid Rhombic pyramid

Volume edit

The volume of a pyramid (also any cone) is  , where b is the area of the base and h the height from the base to the apex. This works for any polygon, regular or non-regular, and any location of the apex, provided that h is measured as the perpendicular distance from the plane containing the base. In 499 AD Aryabhata, a mathematician-astronomer from the classical age of Indian mathematics and Indian astronomy, used this method in the Aryabhatiya (section 2.6).

The formula can be formally proved using calculus. By similarity, the linear dimensions of a cross-section parallel to the base increase linearly from the apex to the base. The scaling factor (proportionality factor) is  , or  , where h is the height and y is the perpendicular distance from the plane of the base to the cross-section. Since the area of any cross-section is proportional to the square of the shape's scaling factor, the area of a cross-section at height y is  , or since both b and h are constants,  . The volume is given by the integral

 

The same equation,  , also holds for cones with any base. This can be proven by an argument similar to the one above; see volume of a cone.

For example, the volume of a pyramid whose base is an n-sided regular polygon with side length s and whose height is h is

 

The formula can also be derived exactly without calculus for pyramids with rectangular bases. Consider a unit cube. Draw lines from the center of the cube to each of the 8 vertices. This partitions the cube into 6 equal square pyramids of base area 1 and height 1/2. As 1 of 6 identical pyramids within the unit cube with volume 1, each pyramid clearly has volume of 1/6. If we assume that the volume formula will be proportional to both height and base, the proportionality constant must be 1/3. From this we deduce that pyramid volume = height × base area / 3.

Next, expand the cube uniformly in three directions by unequal amounts so that the resulting rectangular solid edges are a, b and c, with solid volume abc. Under our assumption of volume proportionality to height and base, each of the 6 pyramids within are likewise expanded. And each pyramid has the same volume abc/6. Since pairs of pyramids have heights a/2, b/2 and c/2, we see that pyramid volume = height × base area / 3 again.

When the side triangles are equilateral, the formula for the volume is

 

This formula only applies for n = 2, 3, 4 and 5; and it also covers the case n = 6, for which the volume equals zero (i.e., the pyramid height is zero).[citation needed]

Surface area edit

The surface area of a pyramid is  , where B is the base area, P is the base perimeter, and the slant height  , where h is the pyramid altitude and r is the inradius of the base.

Centroid edit

The centroid of a pyramid is located on the line segment that connects the apex to the centroid of the base. For a solid pyramid, the centroid is 1/4 the distance from the base to the apex.

n-dimensional pyramids edit

A 2-dimensional pyramid is a triangle, formed by a base edge connected to a noncolinear point called an apex.

A 4-dimensional pyramid is called a polyhedral pyramid, constructed by a polyhedron in a 3-space hyperplane of 4-space with another point off that hyperplane.

Higher-dimensional pyramids are constructed similarly.

The family of simplices represent pyramids in any dimension, increasing from triangle, tetrahedron, 5-cell, 5-simplex, etc. A n-dimensional simplex has the minimum n+1 vertices, with all pairs of vertices connected by edges, all triples of vertices defining faces, all quadruples of points defining tetrahedral cells, etc.

Polyhedral pyramid edit

In 4-dimensional geometry, a polyhedral pyramid is a 4-polytope constructed by a base polyhedron cell and an apex point. The lateral facets are pyramid cells, each constructed by one face of the base polyhedron and the apex. The vertices and edges of polyhedral pyramids form examples of apex graphs, graphs formed by adding one vertex (the apex) to a planar graph (the graph of the base). The dual of a polyhedral pyramid is another polyhedral pyramid, with a dual base.

The regular 5-cell (or 4-simplex) is an example of a tetrahedral pyramid. Uniform polyhedra with circumradii less than 1 can be make polyhedral pyramids with regular tetrahedral sides. A polyhedron with v vertices, e edges, and f faces can be the base on a polyhedral pyramid with v+1 vertices, e+v edges, f+e faces, and 1+f cells.

A 4D polyhedral pyramid with axial symmetry can be visualized in 3D with a Schlegel diagram—a 3D projection that places the apex at the center of the base polyhedron.

Equilateral uniform polyhedron-based pyramids (Schlegel diagram)
Symmetry [1,1,4] [1,2,3] [1,3,3] [1,4,3] [1,5,3]
Name Square-pyramidal pyramid Triangular prism pyramid Tetrahedral pyramid Cubic pyramid Octahedral pyramid Icosahedral pyramid
Segmentochora
index[8]
K4.4 K4.7 K4.1 K4.26.1 K4.3 K4.84
Height 0.707107 0.645497 0.790569 0.500000 0.707107 0.309017
Image
(Base)
           
Base Square
pyramid
Triangular
prism
Tetrahedron Cube Octahedron Icosahedron

Any convex 4-polytope can be divided into polyhedral pyramids by adding an interior point and creating one pyramid from each facet to the center point. This can be useful for computing volumes.

The 4-dimensional hypervolume of a polyhedral pyramid is 1/4 of the volume of the base polyhedron times its perpendicular height, compared to the area of a triangle being 1/2 the length of the base times the height and the volume of a pyramid being 1/3 the area of the base times the height.

The 3-dimensional surface volume of a polyhedral pyramid is  , where B is the base volume, A is the base surface area, and L is the slant height (height of the lateral pyramidal cells)  , where h is the height and r is the inradius.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pisanski, Tomaž; Servatius, Brigitte (2013), Configuration from a Graphical Viewpoint, Springer, p. 21, doi:10.1007/978-0-8176-8364-1, ISBN 978-0-8176-8363-4
  2. ^ "Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, πυραμίς", www.perseus.tufts.edu
  3. ^ The word meant "a kind of cake of roasted wheat-grains preserved in honey"; the Egyptian pyramids were named after its form. See Beekes, Robert S. (2009), Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, p. 1261.
  4. ^ Kern, William F.; Bland, James R. (1938), Solid Mensuration with proofs, p. 46
  5. ^ Frye, Albert Irvin (1913), Civil Engineers' Pocket Book: A Reference-book for Engineers, Contractors, and Students, Containing Rules, Data, Methods, Formulas and Tables, D. Van Nostrand Company, p. 248
  6. ^ Johnson, Norman W. (2018), Geometries and Transformations, ISBN 978-1-107-10340-5. See Chapter 11: Finite symmetry groups, 11.3 Pyramids, Prisms, and Antiprisms
  7. ^ Wenninger, Magnus J. (1974), Polyhedron Models, Cambridge University Press, p. 50, ISBN 978-0-521-09859-5, from the original on 2013-12-11
  8. ^ Convex Segmentochora 2014-04-19 at the Wayback Machine Dr. Richard Klitzing, Symmetry: Culture and Science, Vol. 11, Nos. 1–4, 139–181, 2000

External links edit

pyramid, geometry, geometry, pyramid, from, ancient, greek, πυραμίς, puramís, polyhedron, formed, connecting, polygonal, base, point, called, apex, each, base, edge, apex, form, triangle, called, lateral, face, conic, solid, with, polygonal, base, pyramid, wit. In geometry a pyramid from Ancient Greek pyramis puramis 2 3 is a polyhedron formed by connecting a polygonal base and a point called the apex Each base edge and apex form a triangle called a lateral face It is a conic solid with polygonal base A pyramid with an n sided base has n 1 vertices n 1 faces and 2n edges All pyramids are self dual Regular based right pyramidsExample square pyramidFacesn triangles1 n sided polygonEdges2nVerticesn 1Schlafli symbol n Conway notationYnSymmetry groupCnv 1 n nn order 2nRotation groupCn 1 n nn order nDual polyhedronself dualPropertiesconvexThe 1 skeleton of pyramid is a wheel graph 1 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Right pyramids with a regular base 2 1 Right star pyramids 3 Right pyramids with an irregular base 4 Volume 5 Surface area 6 Centroid 7 n dimensional pyramids 7 1 Polyhedral pyramid 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksTerminology editA right pyramid has its apex directly above the centroid of its base Nonright pyramids are called oblique pyramids A regular pyramid has a regular polygon base and is usually implied to be a right pyramid 4 5 When unspecified a pyramid is usually assumed to be a regular square pyramid like the physical pyramid structures A triangle based pyramid is more often called a tetrahedron Among oblique pyramids like acute and obtuse triangles a pyramid can be called acute if its apex is above the interior of the base and obtuse if its apex is above the exterior of the base A right angled pyramid has its apex above an edge or vertex of the base In a tetrahedron these qualifiers change based on which face is considered the base Pyramids are a class of the prismatoids Pyramids can be doubled into bipyramids by adding a second offset point on the other side of the base plane nbsp A pyramid truncated by an inclined planeA pyramid cut off by a plane is called a truncated pyramid if the truncation plane is parallel to the pyramid s base it is called a frustum Right pyramids with a regular base editA right pyramid with a regular base has isosceles triangle sides with symmetry is Cnv or 1 n with order 2n It can be given an extended Schlafli symbol n representing a point joined orthogonally offset to a regular polygon n A join operation creates a new edge between all pairs of vertices of the two joined figures 6 The trigonal or triangular pyramid with all equilateral triangle faces becomes the regular tetrahedron one of the Platonic solids A lower symmetry case of the triangular pyramid is C3v which has an equilateral triangle base and 3 identical isosceles triangle sides The square and pentagonal pyramids can also be composed of regular convex polygons in which case they are Johnson solids If all edges of a square pyramid or any convex polyhedron are tangent to a sphere so that the average position of the tangential points are at the center of the sphere then the pyramid is said to be canonical and it forms half of a regular octahedron Pyramids with a hexagon or higher base must be composed of isosceles triangles A hexagonal pyramid with equilateral triangles would be a completely flat figure and a heptagonal or higher would have the triangles not meet at all Regular pyramidsDigonal Triangular Square Pentagonal Hexagonal Heptagonal Octagonal Enneagonal Decagonal Improper Regular Equilateral Isosceles nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Right star pyramids edit Right pyramids with regular star polygon bases are called star pyramids 7 For example the pentagrammic pyramid has a pentagram base and 5 intersecting triangle sides nbsp Right pyramids with an irregular base edit nbsp Example general right pyramid with apex above the centroid of a base polygonA right pyramid can be named as P where is the apex point is a join operator and P is a base polygon An isosceles triangle right tetrahedron can be written as as the join of a point to an isosceles triangle base as or as the join orthogonal offsets of two orthogonal segments a digonal disphenoid containing 4 isosceles triangle faces It has C1v symmetry from two different base apex orientations and C2v in its full symmetry A rectangular right pyramid written as and a rhombic pyramid as both have symmetry C2v Right pyramids nbsp nbsp Rectangular pyramid Rhombic pyramidVolume editSee also Cone geometry Volume The volume of a pyramid also any cone is V 1 3 b h textstyle V tfrac 1 3 bh nbsp where b is the area of the base and h the height from the base to the apex This works for any polygon regular or non regular and any location of the apex provided that h is measured as the perpendicular distance from the plane containing the base In 499 AD Aryabhata a mathematician astronomer from the classical age of Indian mathematics and Indian astronomy used this method in the Aryabhatiya section 2 6 The formula can be formally proved using calculus By similarity the linear dimensions of a cross section parallel to the base increase linearly from the apex to the base The scaling factor proportionality factor is 1 y h textstyle 1 tfrac y h nbsp or h y h textstyle tfrac h y h nbsp where h is the height and y is the perpendicular distance from the plane of the base to the cross section Since the area of any cross section is proportional to the square of the shape s scaling factor the area of a cross section at height y is b h y 2 h 2 textstyle b tfrac h y 2 h 2 nbsp or since both b and h are constants b h 2 h y 2 textstyle tfrac b h 2 h y 2 nbsp The volume is given by the integral b h 2 0 h h y 2 d y b 3 h 2 h y 3 0 h 1 3 b h displaystyle frac b h 2 int 0 h h y 2 dy frac b 3h 2 h y 3 bigg 0 h tfrac 1 3 bh nbsp The same equation V 1 3 b h displaystyle V tfrac 1 3 bh nbsp also holds for cones with any base This can be proven by an argument similar to the one above see volume of a cone For example the volume of a pyramid whose base is an n sided regular polygon with side length s and whose height is h is V n 12 h s 2 cot p n displaystyle V frac n 12 hs 2 cot frac pi n nbsp The formula can also be derived exactly without calculus for pyramids with rectangular bases Consider a unit cube Draw lines from the center of the cube to each of the 8 vertices This partitions the cube into 6 equal square pyramids of base area 1 and height 1 2 As 1 of 6 identical pyramids within the unit cube with volume 1 each pyramid clearly has volume of 1 6 If we assume that the volume formula will be proportional to both height and base the proportionality constant must be 1 3 From this we deduce that pyramid volume height base area 3 Next expand the cube uniformly in three directions by unequal amounts so that the resulting rectangular solid edges are a b and c with solid volume abc Under our assumption of volume proportionality to height and base each of the 6 pyramids within are likewise expanded And each pyramid has the same volume abc 6 Since pairs of pyramids have heights a 2 b 2 and c 2 we see that pyramid volume height base area 3 again When the side triangles are equilateral the formula for the volume is V 1 12 n s 3 cot p n 1 1 4 sin 2 p n displaystyle V frac 1 12 ns 3 cot left frac pi n right sqrt 1 frac 1 4 sin 2 tfrac pi n nbsp This formula only applies for n 2 3 4 and 5 and it also covers the case n 6 for which the volume equals zero i e the pyramid height is zero citation needed Surface area editThe surface area of a pyramid is S A B 1 2 P L textstyle SA B tfrac 1 2 PL nbsp where B is the base area P is the base perimeter and the slant height L h 2 r 2 textstyle L sqrt h 2 r 2 nbsp where h is the pyramid altitude and r is the inradius of the base Centroid editThe centroid of a pyramid is located on the line segment that connects the apex to the centroid of the base For a solid pyramid the centroid is 1 4 the distance from the base to the apex n dimensional pyramids editA 2 dimensional pyramid is a triangle formed by a base edge connected to a noncolinear point called an apex A 4 dimensional pyramid is called a polyhedral pyramid constructed by a polyhedron in a 3 space hyperplane of 4 space with another point off that hyperplane Higher dimensional pyramids are constructed similarly The family of simplices represent pyramids in any dimension increasing from triangle tetrahedron 5 cell 5 simplex etc A n dimensional simplex has the minimum n 1 vertices with all pairs of vertices connected by edges all triples of vertices defining faces all quadruples of points defining tetrahedral cells etc Polyhedral pyramid edit In 4 dimensional geometry a polyhedral pyramid is a 4 polytope constructed by a base polyhedron cell and an apex point The lateral facets are pyramid cells each constructed by one face of the base polyhedron and the apex The vertices and edges of polyhedral pyramids form examples of apex graphs graphs formed by adding one vertex the apex to a planar graph the graph of the base The dual of a polyhedral pyramid is another polyhedral pyramid with a dual base The regular 5 cell or 4 simplex is an example of a tetrahedral pyramid Uniform polyhedra with circumradii less than 1 can be make polyhedral pyramids with regular tetrahedral sides A polyhedron with v vertices e edges and f faces can be the base on a polyhedral pyramid with v 1 vertices e v edges f e faces and 1 f cells A 4D polyhedral pyramid with axial symmetry can be visualized in 3D with a Schlegel diagram a 3D projection that places the apex at the center of the base polyhedron Equilateral uniform polyhedron based pyramids Schlegel diagram Symmetry 1 1 4 1 2 3 1 3 3 1 4 3 1 5 3 Name Square pyramidal pyramid Triangular prism pyramid Tetrahedral pyramid Cubic pyramid Octahedral pyramid Icosahedral pyramidSegmentochoraindex 8 K4 4 K4 7 K4 1 K4 26 1 K4 3 K4 84Height 0 707107 0 645497 0 790569 0 500000 0 707107 0 309017Image Base nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Base Squarepyramid Triangularprism Tetrahedron Cube Octahedron IcosahedronAny convex 4 polytope can be divided into polyhedral pyramids by adding an interior point and creating one pyramid from each facet to the center point This can be useful for computing volumes The 4 dimensional hypervolume of a polyhedral pyramid is 1 4 of the volume of the base polyhedron times its perpendicular height compared to the area of a triangle being 1 2 the length of the base times the height and the volume of a pyramid being 1 3 the area of the base times the height The 3 dimensional surface volume of a polyhedral pyramid is S V B 1 3 A L textstyle SV B tfrac 1 3 AL nbsp where B is the base volume A is the base surface area and L is the slant height height of the lateral pyramidal cells L h 2 r 2 textstyle L sqrt h 2 r 2 nbsp where h is the height and r is the inradius See also editBipyramid Cone geometry Trigonal pyramid chemistry FrustumReferences edit Pisanski Tomaz Servatius Brigitte 2013 Configuration from a Graphical Viewpoint Springer p 21 doi 10 1007 978 0 8176 8364 1 ISBN 978 0 8176 8363 4 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon pyramis www perseus tufts edu The word meant a kind of cake of roasted wheat grains preserved in honey the Egyptian pyramids were named after its form See Beekes Robert S 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill p 1261 Kern William F Bland James R 1938 Solid Mensuration with proofs p 46 Frye Albert Irvin 1913 Civil Engineers Pocket Book A Reference book for Engineers Contractors and Students Containing Rules Data Methods Formulas and Tables D Van Nostrand Company p 248 Johnson Norman W 2018 Geometries and Transformations ISBN 978 1 107 10340 5 See Chapter 11 Finite symmetry groups 11 3 Pyramids Prisms and Antiprisms Wenninger Magnus J 1974 Polyhedron Models Cambridge University Press p 50 ISBN 978 0 521 09859 5 archived from the original on 2013 12 11 Convex Segmentochora Archived 2014 04 19 at the Wayback Machine Dr Richard Klitzing Symmetry Culture and Science Vol 11 Nos 1 4 139 181 2000External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pyramids geometry Weisstein Eric W Pyramid MathWorld Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pyramid geometry amp oldid 1176048320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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