A cube is a
polyhedron with eight vertices and twelve equal-length edges, forming six
squares as its faces. A cube is a special case of a
rectangular cuboid, which has six
rectangular faces, each of which has a pair of opposite equal-length and parallel edges. Both polyhedra have the same
dihedral angle, the angle between two adjacent faces at a common edge, a
right angle or 90°, obtained from the
interior angle (an angle formed between two adjacent sides at a common point of a
polygon within) of a square. More generally, the cube and the rectangular cuboid are special cases of a
cuboid, a polyhedron with six
quadrilaterals (four-sided polygons). As for all convex polyhedra, the cube has
Euler characteristic of 2, according to the formula V - E + F = 2 ; the three letters denote respectively the number of vertices, edges, and faces. All three square faces surrounding a vertex are
orthogonal to each other, meaning the planes are perpendicular, forming a right angle between two adjacent squares. Hence, the cube is classified as an
orthogonal polyhedron. The cube is a special case of other cuboids. These include a
parallelepiped, a polyhedron with six
parallelograms faces, because its pairs of opposite faces are congruent; a
rhombohedron, as a special case of a parallelepiped with six
rhombi faces, because the interior angle of all of the faces is right; and a
trigonal trapezohedron, a polyhedron with congruent quadrilateral faces, since its square faces are the special cases of rhombi. The cube is a
non-composite or an elementary polyhedron. That is, no plane intersecting its surface only along edges, thereby cutting into two or more convex, regular-faced polyhedra.
Measurement Given a cube with edge length a , the
face diagonal of the cube is the
diagonal of a square a\sqrt{2} , and the
space diagonal of the cube is a line connecting two vertices that are not in the same face, formulated as {{nowrap|1= a \sqrt{3} .}} Both formulas can be determined by using the
Pythagorean theorem. The surface area of a cube A is six times the area of a square: A = 6a^2. The volume of a rectangular cuboid is calculated by multiplying its length, width, and height together. Because all the edges of a cube are equal in length, the formula for the volume of a cube is the third power of its side length. This leads to the use of the term
cube as a
verb, to mean raising any number to the third power: V = a^3. The cube has three types of
closed geodesics, or paths on a cube's surface that are locally straight. In other words, they avoid the vertices, follow line segments across the faces that they cross, and form
complementary angles on the two incident faces of each edge that they cross. One configuration lies in a plane parallel to a face of the cube and forms a square congruent to that face, with a side length four times that of the cube’s edge. Another type lies in a plane perpendicular to the long diagonal, forming a regular hexagon; its length is 3 \sqrt 2 times that of an edge. The third type is a non-planar hexagon. An
insphere of a cube r_i is a sphere tangent to the faces of a cube at their
centroids. Its
midsphere r_m is a sphere tangent to the edges of a cube. Its
circumsphere r_c is a sphere tangent to the vertices of a cube. With edge length a , they are respectively: r_i = \frac{1}{2}a = 0.5a, \qquad r_m = \frac{\sqrt{2}}{2}a \approx 0.707a, \qquad r_c = \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}a \approx 0.866a.
Unit cube |alt=Cube with a hole through which an equal cube can pass A
unit cube is a cube with
1 unit in length along each edge. It follows that each face is a
unit square and that the entire figure has a volume of 1 cubic unit.
Prince Rupert of the Rhine, known for
Prince Rupert's drop, wagered whether
a cube could be passed through a hole made in another cube of the same size. The story recounted in 1693 by English mathematician
John Wallis answered that it is possible, although there were some errors in Wallis's presentation. Roughly a century later, Dutch mathematician
Pieter Nieuwland provided a better solution that the edges of a cube passing through the unit cube's hole could be as large as approximately 1.06 units in length. One way to obtain this result is by using the Pythagorean theorem or the formula for
Euclidean distance in three-dimensional space. An ancient problem of
doubling the cube requires the construction of a cube with a volume twice the original by using only a
compass and straightedge. This was concluded by French mathematician
Pierre Wantzel in 1837, proving that it is impossible to implement since a cube with twice the volume of the original—the
cube root of 2, \sqrt[3]{2} —is not
constructible. However, this problem was solved with
folding an origami paper by .
Symmetry .|alt=Octahedron shown with its vertices tangent to the faces of a cube, its dual The cube has
octahedral symmetry \mathrm{O}_\mathrm{h} of order 48. In other words, the cube has 48
isometries (including
identity), each of which transforms the cube to itself. These transformations include nine
reflection symmetries (where two halves cut by a plane are identical): three cut the cube at the midpoints of its edges, and six cut diagonally. The cube also has thirteen axes of
rotational symmetry (whereby rotation around the axis results in an identical appearance): three axes pass through the centroids of opposite faces, six through the midpoints of opposite edges, and four through opposite vertices; these axes are respectively four-fold rotational symmetry (0°, 90°, 180°, and 270°), two-fold rotational symmetry (0° and 180°), and three-fold rotational symmetry (0°, 120°, and 240°). The
dual polyhedron can be obtained from each of the polyhedra's vertices tangent to a plane by a process known as
polar reciprocation. One property of dual polyhedra is that the polyhedron and its dual share their
three-dimensional symmetry point group. In this case, the dual polyhedron of a cube is the
regular octahedron, and both of these polyhedra have the same octahedral symmetry. The cube is
face-transitive, meaning its two square faces are alike and can be mapped by rotation and reflection. It is
vertex-transitive, meaning all of its vertices are equivalent and can be mapped
isometrically under its symmetry. It is also
edge-transitive, meaning the same kind of faces surround each of its vertices in the same or reverse order, and each pair of adjacent faces has the same dihedral angle. Therefore, the cube is a
regular polyhedron. Each vertex is surrounded by three squares, so the cube is 4.4.4 by
vertex configuration or \{4,3\} by
Schläfli symbol. == Appearances ==