5-polytopes may be classified based on properties like "
convexity" and "
symmetry". • A 5-polytope is
convex if its boundary (including its cells, faces and edges) does not intersect itself and the line segment joining any two points of the 5-polytope is contained in the 5-polytope or its interior; otherwise, it is
non-convex. Self-intersecting 5-polytopes are also known as
star polytopes, from analogy with the star-like shapes of the non-convex
Kepler-Poinsot polyhedra. • A
uniform 5-polytope has a
symmetry group under which all vertices are equivalent, and its facets are
uniform 4-polytopes. The faces of a uniform polytope must be
regular. • A
semi-regular 5-polytope contains two or more types of regular 4-polytope facets. There is only one such figure, called a
demipenteract. • A
regular 5-polytope has all identical regular 4-polytope facets. All regular 5-polytopes are convex. • A
prismatic 5-polytope is constructed by a
Cartesian product of two lower-dimensional polytopes. A prismatic 5-polytope is uniform if its factors are uniform. The
hypercube is prismatic (product of a
square and a
cube), but is considered separately because it has symmetries other than those inherited from its factors. • A
4-space tessellation is the division of four-dimensional
Euclidean space into a regular grid of polychoral facets. Strictly speaking, tessellations are not polytopes as they do not bound a "5D" volume, but we include them here for the sake of completeness because they are similar in many ways to polytopes. A
uniform 4-space tessellation is one whose vertices are related by a
space group and whose facets are uniform 4-polytopes. == Regular 5-polytopes ==