The regular octahedron has 6 vertices and 12 edges, the minimum for an octahedron; irregular octahedra may have as many as 12 vertices and 18 edges. There are 257 topologically distinct
convex octahedra, excluding mirror images. More specifically there are 2, 11, 42, 74, 76, 38, 14 for octahedra with 6 to 12 vertices respectively. (Two polyhedra are "topologically distinct" if they have intrinsically different arrangements of faces and vertices, such that it is impossible to distort one into the other simply by changing the lengths of edges or the angles between edges or faces.) Notable eight-sided convex polyhedra include: File:Hexagonal Prism.svg |
Hexagonal prism: Two faces are parallel regular hexagons; six squares link corresponding pairs of hexagon edges. With all faces regular and all vertices symmetric to each other, this is a
uniform polyhedron. It tiles space by translation as a
parallelohedron. The hexagonal
frustum is topologically equivalent. File:Truncatedtetrahedron.jpg |
Truncated tetrahedron: The four faces from the tetrahedron are truncated to become regular hexagons, and there are four more equilateral triangle faces where each tetrahedron vertex was truncated. As a uniform polyhedron that is not a prism or
antiprism, this is an
Archimedean solid. File:Gyrobifastigium.png |
Gyrobifastigium: Two uniform
triangular prisms glued over one of their square sides so that no triangle shares an edge with another triangle. As a polyhedron whose faces are regular polygons, it is a
Johnson solid. It is a
space-filling polyhedron. Its
dual polyhedron is also an octahedron. File:Augmented triangular prism.png |
Augmented triangular prism: The result of gluing a triangular prism to a
square pyramid, this has six equilateral triangle faces and two square faces. It is also a Johnson solid. File:Triangular cupola.png |
Triangular cupola: Another Johnson solid, this has one regular hexagon face, three square faces, and four equilateral triangle faces. File:Tridiminished icosahedron.png|
Tridiminished icosahedron: Another Johnson solid, obtained by removing three pentagonal pyramids from a regular icosahedron, resulting in three pentagonal and five triangular faces. File:Heptagonal pyramid.svg| Heptagonal
pyramid: One face is a
heptagon (usually regular), and the remaining seven faces are triangles (usually
isosceles). It is not possible for all triangular faces to be equilateral. It is a
self-dual polyhedron. File:Tetragonal trapezohedron.png |
Tetragonal trapezohedron: The eight faces are congruent
kites. Up to topological equivalence it is the only octahedron all of whose faces are
quadrilaterals. File:Dual elongated triangular dipyramid.png |
Triangular bifrustum: The dual of an
elongated triangular bipyramid (a Johnson solid), this can be realized with six
isosceles trapezoid faces and two equilateral triangle faces. File:Triangular truncated trapezohedron.png |
Truncated triangular trapezohedron, also called Dürer's solid: Obtained by truncating two opposite corners of a cube or rhombohedron, this has six pentagon faces and two triangle faces. File:Dual digonal gyrobianticupola.png|
Gabled rhombohedron with four pentagonal faces and four rectangular faces. Like the gyrobifastigium, it is a space-filling polyhedron. == References ==