Prismoid: Difference between revisions
From Food & Medicine Encyclopedia
CSV import |
No edit summary |
| (One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |
(No difference)
| |
Latest revision as of 13:09, 18 March 2025
Prismoid is a geometrical figure that is a type of polyhedron. It is a solid figure whose ends are similar, equal, and parallel rectilinear figures, and whose sides are parallelograms.
A prismoid includes prisms and antiprisms, which are a special case of a prismoid. The term "prismoid" is also used to refer to a solid figure that can be divided into such shapes.
Definition[edit]
A prismoid is defined as a polyhedron with two parallel faces, known as the bases, and the remaining faces, known as the lateral faces, are parallelograms. The bases are similar and congruent polygons.
Types of Prismoids[edit]
There are several types of prismoids, including:
- Prism: A prism is a prismoid whose bases are polygons and whose lateral faces are rectangles.
- Antiprism: An antiprism is a prismoid whose bases are polygons and whose lateral faces are triangles.
- Frustum: A frustum is a prismoid that is the result of cutting a regular polyhedron parallel to its base, thus forming a smaller base and a larger base.
Volume of Prismoids[edit]
The volume of a prismoid can be calculated using the formula:
V = h/6 * (B1 + 4M + B2)
where:
- V is the volume
- h is the height
- B1 and B2 are the areas of the two bases
- M is the area of a section midway between the two bases
See Also[edit]
References[edit]
<references />


