A enneadecahedron (or enneakaidecahedron) is a polyhedron with 19 faces. No enneadecahedron is regular; hence, the name is ambiguous.

There are numerous topologically distinct forms of an enneadecahedron, for example the octadecagonal (18-sided) pyramid, or the heptadecagonal (17-sided) prism; the latter is the only convex enneadecahedron with all regular polygonal faces.

Convex enneadecahedra

There are many topologically distinct convex enneadecahedra, excluding mirror images, having at least 12 vertices. (Two polyhedra are "topologically distinct" if they have intrinsically different arrangements of faces and vertices, such that it is possible to distort one into the other simply by changing the lengths of edges or the angles between edges or faces.)

References

External links

  • What Are Polyhedra?, with Greek Numerical Prefixes



Ebene von Esdraelon von den Höhen über Nazareth, 19. Jahrhundert

Eneaedro de Herschel Herschel enneahedron YouTube

Octahedronund DodecahedronVektorIllustration Vektor Abbildung

Эннеада/Ennead Египетская мифология, Древний египет, Мифология

The Ennedi Massif, narrow Explore Chad Unesco World Heritage