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Solid geometry or stereometry is the geometry of three-dimensional Euclidean space (3D space).[1] A solid figure is the region of 3D space bounded by a two-dimensional closed surface; for example, a solid ball consists of a sphere and its interior.
Solid geometry deals with the measurements of volumes of various solids, including pyramids, prisms (and other polyhedrons), cubes, cylinders, cones (and truncated cones).[2]
History
editThe Pythagoreans dealt with the regular solids, but the pyramid, prism, cone and cylinder were not studied until the Platonists. Eudoxus established their measurement, proving the pyramid and cone to have one-third the volume of a prism and cylinder on the same base and of the same height. He was probably also the discoverer of a proof that the volume enclosed by a sphere is proportional to the cube of its radius.[3]
Topics
editBasic topics in solid geometry and stereometry include:
- incidence of planes and lines
- dihedral angle and solid angle
- the cube, cuboid, parallelepiped
- the tetrahedron and other pyramids
- prisms
- octahedron, dodecahedron, icosahedron
- cones and cylinders
- the sphere
- other quadrics: spheroid, ellipsoid, paraboloid and hyperboloids.
Advanced topics include:
- projective geometry of three dimensions (leading to a proof of Desargues' theorem by using an extra dimension)
- further polyhedra
- descriptive geometry.
List of solid figures
editWhereas a sphere is the surface of a ball, for other solid figures it is sometimes ambiguous whether the term refers to the surface of the figure or the volume enclosed therein, notably for a cylinder.
Figure | Definitions | Images | |
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Parallelepiped |
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Rhombohedron |
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Cuboid |
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Polyhedron | Flat polygonal faces, straight edges and sharp corners or vertices | Small stellated dodecahedron |
Toroidal polyhedron |
Uniform polyhedron | Regular polygons as faces and is vertex-transitive (i.e., there is an isometry mapping any vertex onto any other) | (Regular) Tetrahedron and Cube |
Unform Snub dodecahedron |
Pyramid | A polyhedron comprising an n-sided polygonal base and a vertex point | square pyramid | |
Prism | A polyhedron comprising an n-sided polygonal base, a second base which is a translated copy (rigidly moved without rotation) of the first, and n other faces (necessarily all parallelograms) joining corresponding sides of the two bases | hexagonal prism | |
Antiprism | A polyhedron comprising an n-sided polygonal base, a second base translated and rotated.sides]] of the two bases | square antiprism | |
Bipyramid | A polyhedron comprising an n-sided polygonal center with two apexes. | triangular bipyramid | |
Trapezohedron | A polyhedron with 2n kite faces around an axis, with half offsets | tetragonal trapezohedron | |
Cone | Tapers smoothly from a flat base (frequently, though not necessarily, circular) to a point called the apex or vertex | A right circular cone and an oblique circular cone | |
Cylinder | Straight parallel sides and a circular or oval cross section | A solid elliptic cylinder |
A right and an oblique circular cylinder |
Ellipsoid | A surface that may be obtained from a sphere by deforming it by means of directional scalings, or more generally, of an affine transformation | Examples of ellipsoids |
sphere (top, a=b=c=4), spheroid (bottom left, a=b=5, c=3), |
Lemon | A lens (or less than half of a circular arc) rotated about an axis passing through the endpoints of the lens (or arc)[6] | ||
Hyperboloid | A surface that is generated by rotating a hyperbola around one of its principal axes |
Techniques
editVarious techniques and tools are used in solid geometry. Among them, analytic geometry and vector techniques have a major impact by allowing the systematic use of linear equations and matrix algebra, which are important for higher dimensions.
Applications
editA major application of solid geometry and stereometry is in 3D computer graphics.
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ The Britannica Guide to Geometry, Britannica Educational Publishing, 2010, pp. 67–68.
- ^ Kiselev 2008.
- ^ Paraphrased and taken in part from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.
- ^ Robertson, Stewart Alexander (1984). Polytopes and Symmetry. Cambridge University Press. p. 75. ISBN 9780521277396.
- ^ Dupuis, Nathan Fellowes (1893). Elements of Synthetic Solid Geometry. Macmillan. p. 53. Retrieved December 1, 2018.
- ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Lemon". Wolfram MathWorld. Retrieved 2019-11-04.
References
edit- Kiselev, A. P. (2008). Geometry. Vol. Book II. Stereometry. Translated by Givental, Alexander. Sumizdat.