An
axial diagonal is a space diagonal that passes through the center of a polyhedron. For example, in a
cube with edge length
a, all four space diagonals are axial diagonals, of common length a\sqrt {3}. More generally, a
cuboid with edge lengths
a,
b, and
c has all four space diagonals axial, with common length \sqrt{a^2+b^2+c^2}. A regular
octahedron has 3 axial diagonals, of length a\sqrt {2}, with edge length
a. A
regular icosahedron has 6 axial diagonals of length a\sqrt {2+\varphi}, where \varphi is the
golden ratio (1+\sqrt 5)/2. == Space diagonals of magic cubes==