Decahedron Definition

Polyhedrons are those geometric elements with different flat faces. In fact, the word polyhedron in Greek literally means “many faces.”

These figures can be understood as a solid or three-dimensional body and its volume depends on the different faces of each polyhedron.

It should be noted that the idea of ​​a polyhedron refers to a set of polygons in three dimensions and the idea of ​​a polygon refers to flat figures.

The decahedron is a ten-sided polyhedron.

The polyhedrons are regular when their different faces and angles are equal to each other and they are irregular when this criterion is not followed. Another way to classify them is by the number of faces. On the other hand, polyhedra are divided into convex and concave, the former being those that can be supported on all their faces, while the latter are those that do not have this property.

Thus, a ten-sided polyhedron is a decahedron. In other words, it is a geometric figure made up of ten flat surfaces, but it is not a regular polyhedron since its faces are not all the same. At the same time, it is a polyhedron that can be both concave and convex, since the number of edges and vertices can vary.

As for the term decahedron, it is composed of two Greek roots: deka, which means ten, and hedra, which means seat.

Examples of Decahedrons

In the role-playing game, a very original type of dice is used, since it has ten faces instead of the traditional six. This ten-sided die is also known by another name, pentagonal trapezohedron (it has 10 faces and four vertices on each of them).

A pentagonal dipyramid is made up of 10 equilateral triangles, 15 edges, and 7 vertices. This polyhedron makes it possible to explain the molecular structure or the three-dimensional arrangement of some atoms that make up a molecule.

Other examples of decahedrons are the octagonal prism (10 faces, 24 edges and 16 vertices) or the enneagonal pyramid (10 faces, 18 edges and 10 vertices).

Plato and the polyhedrons (the Platonic solids)

Plato was the first philosopher and mathematician who addressed the subject of polyhedrons. According to this Greek philosopher of the IV century BC. C, each of the four elements that make up the universe (air, water, earth and fire) is associated with a different polyhedron. Fire is made up of tetrahedrons, air is made up of octahedrons, water is made up of icosahedrons, and earth is made up of cubes.

It should be noted that for Plato there is a fifth polyhedral shape, the dodecahedron, which has been used by God to establish the limit of the universe.

The vision of the Platonic solids expresses a double dimension: the structure of everything that exists and, in parallel, its beauty.

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