Polygons and PolyhedraPlatonic Solids
At the beginning of this course we defined 
In a regular polyhedron all 
So what do the Platonic solids look like – and how many of them are there? To make a three-dimensional shape, we need at least 
If we create a polyhedron where three 
If four equilateral triangles meet at every vertex, we get a different Platonic solid. It is called the Octahedron and has 
If 
If 
And seven or more triangles at every vertex also don’t produce new polyhedra: there is not enough space around a vertex, to fit that many triangles.
This means we’ve found 
If 
If 
Next, let’s try regular pentagons:
If 
Like before, four or more pentagons 
The next regular polygon to try are hexagons:
If three hexagons meet at every vertex, we immediately get a 
The same also happens for all regular polygons with more than six sides. They don’t tessellate, and we certainly don’t get any three-dimensional polygons.
This means that there are just 
Tetrahedron
 
 
Cube
 
 
Octahedron
 
 
Dodecahedron
 20 Vertices
 30 Edges
Icosahedron
 12 Vertices
 30 Edges
 Notice how the number of faces and vertices are 
We can turn a polyhedron into its dual, by “replacing” every face with a vertex, and every vertex with a face. These animations show how:
The tetrahedron is dual with itself. Since it has the same number of faces and vertices, swapping them wouldn’t change anything.

Images from Johannes Kepler’s book “Harmonices Mundi” (1619)
Archimedean Solids
Platonic solids are particularly important polyhedra, but there are countless others.
 Truncated Tetrahedron
 8 faces, 12 vertices, 18 edges
 Cuboctahedron
 14 faces, 12 vertices, 24 edges
 Truncated Cube
 14 faces, 24 vertices, 36 edges
 Truncated Octahedron
 14 faces, 24 vertices, 36 edges
 Rhombicuboctahedron
 26 faces, 24 vertices, 48 edges
 Truncated Cuboctahedron
 26 faces, 48 vertices, 72 edges
 Snub Cube
 38 faces, 24 vertices, 60 edges
 Icosidodecahedron
 32 faces, 30 vertices, 60 edges
 Truncated Dodecahedron
 32 faces, 60 vertices, 90 edges
 Truncated Icosahedron
 32 faces, 60 vertices, 90 edges
 Rhombicosidodecahedron
 62 faces, 60 vertices, 120 edges
 Truncated Icosidodecahedron
 62 faces, 120 vertices, 180 edges
 Snub Dodecahedron
 92 faces, 60 vertices, 150 edges
Applications
Plato was wrong in believing that all elements consists of Platonic solids. But regular polyhedra have many special properties that make them appear elsewhere in nature – and we can copy these properties in science and engineering.
Radiolaria skeleton
Icosahedral virus
Many viruses, bacteria and other small organisms are shaped like 
Buckyball molecule
Montreal Biosphere
Many molecules are shaped like regular polyhedra. The most famous example is 
It was discovered in 1985 when scientists researched interstellar dust. They named it “Buckyball” (or Buckminsterfullerene) after the architect 
Fluorite octahedron
Pyrite cube
Most crystals have their atoms arranged in a regular grid consisting of 
Octagonal space frames
Louvre museum in Paris
Tetrahedra and octahedra are incredibly rigid and stable, which makes them very useful in construction. Space frames are polygonal structures that can support large roofs and heavy bridges.
Football
Polygonal role-playing dice
Platonic solids are also used to create dice. because of their symmetry, every side has the 
The 
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