Elongated hexagonal bipyramid

In geometry, the elongated hexagonal bipyramid is constructed by elongating a hexagonal bipyramid (by inserting a hexagonal prism between its congruent halves).

Elongated hexagonal bipyramid
TypeElongated bipyramid
Faces12 triangles
6 squares
Edges30
Vertices14
Vertex configuration2 of 36
12 of 32.42
Symmetry groupD6h, [6,2], (*226)
Dual polyhedronHexagonal bifrustum
Propertiesconvex
Net

This polyhedron is in the family of elongated bipyramids, of which the first three can be Johnson solids: J14, J15, and J16. The hexagonal form can be constructed by all regular faces but is not a Johnson solid because 6 equilateral triangles would form six co-planar faces (in a regular hexagon).

Uses

  • A quartz crystal is an example of an elongated hexagonal bipyramid. Because it has 18 faces, it can be called an octadecahedron. Other chemicals also have this shape.[1]
  • The edge-first orthogonal projection of a 24-cell is an elongated hexagonal bipyramid.
  • Used as the shape of Fruit Gushers candy.
  • Used as a physical manifestation for assisting various branches of three-dimensional graph theory.

References

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